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THE
KINGDOM OF GOD IS WITHIN YOU
CHRISTIANITY NOT AS A MYSTIC
RELIGION
BUT AS A NEW THEORY OF LIFE
by Count Leo Tolstoy
Chapters:
Preface
1
2
3 4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
CHAPTER 7
Educated people of the upper classes are trying
to stifle the ever-growing sense of the necessity of transforming the existing
social order. But life, which goes on growing more complex, and developing in
the same direction, and increases the inconsistencies and the sufferings of men,
brings them to the limit beyond which they cannot go. This furthest limit of
inconsistency is universal compulsory military service.
It is usually supposed that universal military
service and the increased armaments connected with it, as well as the resulting
increase of taxes and national debts, are a passing phenomenon, produced by the
particular political situation of Europe, and that it may be removed by certain
political combinations without any modification of the inner order of life.
This is absolutely incorrect. Universal military
service is only the internal inconsistency inherent in the social conception of
life, carried to its furthest limits, and becoming evident when a certain stage
of material development is reached.
The social conception of life, we have seen,
consists in the transfer of the aim of life from the individual to groups and
their maintenance--to the tribe, family, race, or state.
In the social conception of life it is supposed
that since the aim of life is found in groups of individuals, individuals will
voluntarily sacrifice their own interests for the interests of the group. And so
it has been, and still is, in fact, in certain groups, the distinction being
that they are the most primitive forms of association in the family or tribe or
race, or even in the patriarchal state. Through tradition handed down by
education and supported by religious sentiment, individuals without compulsion
merged their interests in the interest of the group and sacrificed their own
good for the general welfare.
But the more complex and the larger societies
become, and especially the more often conquest becomes the cause of the
amalgamation of people into a state, the more often individuals strive to attain
their own aims at the public expense, and the more often it becomes necessary to
restrain these insubordinate individuals by recourse to authority, that is, to
violence. The champions of the social conception of life usually try to connect
the idea of authority, that is, of violence, with the idea of moral influence,
but this connection is quite impossible.
The effect of moral influence on a man is to
change his desires and to bend them in the direction of the duty required of
him. The man who is controlled by moral influence acts in accordance with his
own desires. Authority, in the sense in which the word is ordinarily understood,
is a means of forcing a man to act in opposition to his desires. The man who
submits to authority does not do as he chooses but as he is obliged by
authority. Nothing can oblige a man to do what he does not choose except
physical force, or the threat of it, that is--deprivation of freedom, blows,
imprisonment, or threats--easily carried out--of such punishments. This is what
authority consists of and always has consisted of.
In spite of the unceasing efforts of those who
happen to be in authority to conceal this and attribute some other significance
to it, authority has always meant for man the cord, the chain with which he is
bound and fettered, or the knout with which he is to be flogged, or the ax with
which he is to have hands, ears, nose, or head cut off, or at the very least,
the threat of these terrors. So it was under Nero and Ghenghis Khan, and so it
is to-day, even under the most liberal government in the Republics of the United
States or of France. If men submit to authority, it is only because they are
liable to these punishments in case of non- submission. All state obligations,
payment of taxes, fulfillment of state duties, and submission to punishments,
exile, fines, etc., to which people appear to submit voluntarily, are always
based on bodily violence or the threat of it.
The basis of authority is bodily violence. The
possibility of applying bodily violence to people is provided above all by an
organization of armed men, trained to act in unison in submission to one will.
These bands of armed men, submissive to a single will, are what constitute the
army. The army has always been and still is the basis of power. Power is always
in the hands of those who control the army, and all men in power--from the Roman
Caesars to the Russian and German Emperors--take more interest in their army
than in anything, and court popularity in the army, knowing that if that is on
their side their power is secure.
The formation and aggrandizement of the army,
indispensable to the maintenance of authority, is what has introduced into the
social conception of life the principle that is destroying it.
The object of authority and the justification for
its existence lie in the restraint of those who aim at attaining their personal
interests to the detriment of the interests of society.
But however power has been gained, those who
possess it are in no way different from other men, and therefore no more
disposed than others to subordinate their own interests to those of the society.
On the contrary, having the power to do so at their disposal, they are more
disposed than others to subordinate the public interests to their own. Whatever
means men have devised for preventing those in authority from over-riding public
interests for their own benefit, or for intrusting power only to the most
faultless people, they have not so far succeeded in either of those aims.
All the methods of appointing authorities that
have been tried, divine right, and election, and heredity, and balloting, and
assemblies and parliaments and senate--have all proved ineffectual. Everyone
knows that not one of these methods attains the aim either of intrusting power
only to the incorruptible, or of preventing power from being abused. Everyone
knows on the contrary that men in authority--be they emperors, ministers,
governors, or police officers--are always, simply from the possession of power,
more liable to be demoralized, that is, to subordinate public interests to their
personal aims than those who have not the power to do so. Indeed, it could not
be otherwise.
The state conception of life could be justified
only so long as all men voluntarily sacrificed their personal interests to the
public welfare. But so soon as there were individuals who would not voluntarily
sacrifice their own interests, and authority, that is, violence, was needed to
restrain them, then the disintegrating principle of the coercion of one set of
people by another set entered into the social conception of the organization
based on it.
For the authority of one set of men over another
to attain its object of restraining those who override public interests for
their personal ends, power ought only to be put into the hands of the
impeccable, as it is supposed to be among the Chinese, and as it was supposed to
be in the Middle Ages, and is even now supposed to be by those who believe in
the consecration by anointing. Only under those conditions could the social
organization be justified.
But since this is not the case, and on the
contrary men in power are always far from being saints, through the very fact of
their possession of power, the social organization based on power has no
justification.
Even if there was once a time when, owing to the
low standard of morals, and the disposition of men to violence, the existence of
an authority to restrain such violence was an advantage, because the violence of
government was less than the violence of individuals, one cannot but see that
this advantage could not be lasting. As the disposition of individuals to
violence diminished, and as the habits of the people became more civilized, and
as power grew more social organization demoralized through lack of restraint,
this advantage disappeared.
The whole history of the last two thousand years
is nothing but the history of this gradual change of relation between the moral
development of the masses on the one hand and the demoralization of governments
on the other.
This, put simply, is how it has come to pass.
Men lived in families, tribes, and races, at feud
with one another, plundering, outraging, and killing one another. These violent
hostilities were carried on on a large and on a small scale: man against man,
family against family, tribe against tribe, race against race, and people
against people. The larger and stronger groups conquered and absorbed the
weaker, and the larger and stronger they became, the more internal feuds
disappeared and the more the continuity of the group seemed assured.
The members of a family or tribe, united into one
community, are less hostile among themselves, and families and tribes do not die
like one man, but have a continuity of existence. Between the members of one
state, subject to a single authority, the strife between individuals seems still
less and the life of the state seems even more secure.
Their association into larger and larger groups
was not the result of the conscious recognition of the benefits of such
associations, as it is said to be in the story of the Varyagi. It was produced,
on one hand, by the natural growth of population, and, on the other, by struggle
and conquest.
After conquest the power of the emperor puts an
end to internal dissensions, and so the state conception of life justifies
itself. But this justification is never more than temporary. Internal
dissensions disappear only in proportion to the degree of oppression exerted by
the authority over the dissentient individuals. The violence of internal feud
crushed by authority reappears in authority itself, which falls into the hands
of men who, like the rest, are frequently or always ready to sacrifice the
public welfare to their personal interest, with the difference that their
subjects cannot resist them, and thus they are exposed to all the demoralizing
influence of authority. And thus the evil of violence, when it passes into the
hands of authority, is always growing and growing, and in time becomes greater
than the evil it is supposed to suppress, while, at the same time, the tendency
to violence in the members of the society becomes weaker and weaker, so that the
violence of authority is less and less needed.
Government authority, even if it does suppress
private violence, always introduces into the life of men fresh forms of
violence, which tend to become greater and greater in proportion to the duration
and strength of the government.
So that though the violence of power is less
noticeable in government than when it is employed by members of society against
one another, because it finds expression in submission, and not in strife, it
nevertheless exists, and often to a greater degree than in former days.
And it could not, be otherwise, since, apart from
the demoralizing influence of power, the policy or even the unconscious tendency
of those in power will always be to reduce their subjects to the extreme of
weakness, for the weaker the oppressed, the less effort need be made to keep him
in subjection.
And therefore the oppression of the oppressed
always goes on growing up to the furthest limit, beyond which it cannot go
without killing the goose with the golden eggs. And if the goose lays no more
eggs, like the American Indians, negroes, and Fijians, then it is killed in
spite of the sincere protests of philanthropists.
The most convincing example of this is to be
found in the condition of the working classes of our epoch, who are in reality
no better than the slaves of ancient times subdued by conquest.
In spite of the pretended efforts of the higher
classes to ameliorate the position of the workers, all the working classes of
the present day are kept down by the inflexible iron law by which they only get
just what is barely necessary, so that they are forced to work without ceasing
while still retaining strength enough to labor for their employers, who are
really those who have conquered and enslaved them.
So it has always been. In ratio to the duration
and increasing strength of authority its advantages for its subjects disappear
and its disadvantages increase.
And this has been so, independently of the forms
of government under which nations have lived. The only difference is that under
a despotic form of government the authority is concentrated in a small number of
oppressors and violence takes a cruder form; under constitutional monarchies and
republics as in France and America authority is divided among a great number of
oppressors and the forms assumed by violence is less crude, but its effect of
making the disadvantages of authority greater than its advantages, and of
enfeebling the oppressed to the furthest extreme to which they can be reduced
with advantage to the oppressors, remains always the same.
Such has been and still is the condition of all
the oppressed, but hitherto they have not recognized the fact. In the majority
of instances they have believed in all simplicity that governments exist for
their benefit; that they would be lost without a government; that the very idea
of living without a government is a blasphemy which one hardly dare put into
words; that this is the-- for some reason terrible--doctrine of anarchism, with
which a mental picture of all kinds of horrors is associated.
People have believed, as though it were something
fully proved, and so needing no proof, that since all nations have hitherto
developed in the form of states, that form of organization is an indispensable
condition of the development of humanity.
And in that way it has lasted for hundreds and
thousands of years, and governments--those who happened to be in power--have
tried it, and are now trying more zealously than ever to keep their subjects in
this error.
So it was under the Roman emperors and so it is
now. In spite of the fact that the sense of the uselessness and even injurious
effects of state violence is more and more penetrating into men's consciousness,
things might have gone on in the same way forever if governments were not under
the necessity of constantly increasing their armies in order to maintain their
power.
It is generally supposed that governments
strengthen their forces only to defend the state from other states, in oblivion
of the fact that armies are necessary, before all things, for the defense of
governments from their own oppressed and enslaved subjects.
That has always been necessary, and has become
more and more necessary with the increased diffusion of education among the
masses, with the improved communication between people of the same and of
different nationalities. It has become particularly indispensable now in the
face of communism, socialism, anarchism, and the labor movement generally.
Governments feel that it is so, and strengthen the force of their disciplined
armies. [See Footnote]
[Footnote: The fact that in America the abuses
of authority exist in spite of the small number of their troops not only fails
to disprove this position, but positively confirms it. In America there are
fewer soldiers than in other states. That is why there is nowhere else so little
oppression of the working classes, and no country where the end of the abuses of
government and of government itself seems so near. Of late as the combinations
of laborers gain in strength, one hears more and more frequently the cry raised
for the increase of the army, though the United States are not threatened with
any attack from without. The upper classes know that an army of fifty thousand
will soon be insufficient, and no longer relying on Pinkerton's men, they feel
that the security of their position depends on the increased strength of the
army.
In the German Reichstag not long ago, in
reply to a question why funds were needed for raising the salaries of the
under-officers, the German Chancellor openly declared that trustworthy under-
officers were necessary to contend against socialism. Caprivi only said aloud
what every statesman knows and assiduously conceals from the people. The reason
to which he gave expression is essentially the same as that which made the
French kings and the popes engage Swiss and Scotch guards, and makes the Russian
authorities of to-day so carefully distribute the recruits, so that the
regiments from the frontiers are stationed in central districts, and the
regiments from the center are stationed on the frontiers. The meaning of
Caprivi's speech, put into plain language, is that funds are needed, not to
resist foreign foes, but to BUY UNDER-OFFICERS to be ready to act against the
enslaved toiling masses.
Caprivi incautiously gave utterance to what
everyone knows perfectly well, or at least feels vaguely if he does not
recognize it, that is, that the existing order of life is as it is, not, as
would be natural and right, because the people wish it to be so, but because it
is so maintained by state violence, by the army with its BOUGHT UNDER-OFFICERS
and generals.
If the laborer has no land, if he cannot use the
natural right of every man to derive subsistence for himself and his family out
of the land, that is not because the people wish it to be so, but because a
certain set of men, the land-owners, have appropriated the right of giving or
refusing admittance to the land to the laborers. And this abnormal order of
things is maintained by the army. If the immense wealth produced by the labor of
the working classes is not regarded as the property of all, but as the property
of a few exceptional persons; if labor is taxed by authority and the taxes spent
by a few on what they think fit; if strikes on the part of laborers are
repressesd, while on the part of capitalists they are encouraged; if certain
persons appropriate the right of choosing the form of the education, religious
and secular, of children, and certain persons monopolize the right of making the
laws all must obey, and so dispose of the lives and properties of other
people--all this is not done because the people wish it and because it is what
is natural and right, but because the government and ruling classes wish this to
be so for their own benefit, and insist on its being so even by physical
violence.
Everyone, if he does not recognize this now, will
know that it is so at the first attempt at insubordination or at a revolution of
the existing order.
Armies, then, are needed by governments and by
the ruling classes above all to support the present order, which, far from being
the result of the people's needs, is often in direct antagonism to them, and is
only beneficial to the government and ruling classes.
To keep their subjects in oppression and to be
able to enjoy the fruits of their labor the government must have armed forces.
But there is not only one government. There are
other governments, exploiting their subjects by violence in the same way, and
always ready to pounce down on any other government and carry off the fruits of
the toil of its enslaved subjects. And so every government needs an army also to
protect its booty from its neighbor brigands. Every government is thus
involuntarily reduced to the necessity of emulating one another in the increase
of their armies. This increase is contagious, as Montesquieu pointed out 150
years ago.
Every increase in the army of one state, with the
aim of self-defense against its subjects, becomes a source of danger for
neighboring states and calls for a similar increase in their armies.
The armed forces have reached their present
number of millions not only through the menace of danger from neighboring
states, but principally through the necessity of subduing every effort at revolt
on the part of the subjects.
Both causes, mutually dependent, contribute to
the same result at once; troops are required against internal forces and also to
keep up a position with other states. One is the result of the other. The
despotism of a government always increases with the strength of the army and its
external successes, and the aggressiveness of a government increases with its
internal despotism.
The rivalry of the European states in constantly
increasing their forces has reduced them to the necessity of having recourse to
universal military service, since by that means the greatest possible number of
soldiers is obtained at the least possible expense. Germany first hit on this
device. And directly one state adopted it the others were obliged to do the
same. And by this means all citizens are under arms to support the iniquities
practiced upon them; all citizens have become their own oppressors.
Universal military service was an inevitable
logical necessity, to which we were bound to come. But it is also the last
expression of the inconsistency inherent in the social conception of life, when
violence is needed to maintain it. This inconsistency has become obvious in
universal military service. In fact, the whole significance of the social
conception of life consists in man's recognition of the barbarity of strife
between individuals, and the transitoriness of personal life itself, and the
transference of the aim of life to groups of persons. But with universal
military service it comes to pass that men, after making every sacrifice to get
rid of the cruelty of strife and the insecurity of existence, are called upon to
face all the perils they had meant to avoid. And in addition to this the state,
for whose sake individuals renounced their personal advantages, is exposed again
to the same risks of insecurity and lack of permanence as the individual himself
was in previous times.
Governments were to give men freedom from the
cruelty of personal strife and security in the permanence of the state order of
existence. But instead of doing that they expose the individuals to the same
necessity of strife, substituting strife with individuals of other states for
strife with neighbors. And the danger of destruction for the individual, and the
state too, they leave just as it was.
Universal military service may be compared to the
efforts of a man to prop up his falling house who so surrounds it and fills it
with props and buttresses and planks and scaffolding that he manages to keep the
house standing only by making it impossible to live in it.
In the same way universal military service
destroys all the benefits of the social order of life which it is employed to
maintain.
The advantages of social organization are
security of property and labor and associated action for the improvement of
existence-- universal military service destroys all this.
The taxes raised from the people for war
preparations absorb the greater part of the produce of labor which the army
ought to defend.
The withdrawing of all men from the ordinary
course of life destroys the possibility of labor itself. The danger of war, ever
ready to break out, renders all reforms of life social life vain and fruitless.
In former days if a man were told that if he did
not acknowledge the authority of the state, he would be exposed to attack from
enemies domestic and foreign, that he would have to resist them alone, and would
be liable to be killed, and that therefore it would be to his advantage to put
up with some hardships to secure himself from these calamities, he might well
believe it, seeing that the sacrifices he made to the state were only partial
and gave him the hope of a tranquil existence in a permanent state. But now,
when the sacrifices have been increased tenfold and the promised advantages are
disappearing, it would be a natural reflection that submission to authority is
absolutely useless.
But the fatal significance of universal military
service, as the manifestation of the contradiction inherent in the social
conception of life, is not only apparent in that. The greatest manifestation of
this contradiction consists in the fact that every citizen in being made a
soldier becomes a prop of the government organization, and shares the
responsibility of everything the government does, even though he may not admit
its legitimacy.
Governments assert that armies are needed above
all for external defense, but that is not true. They are needed principally
against their subjects, and every man, under universal military service, becomes
an accomplice in all the acts of violence of the government against the citizens
without any choice of his own.
To convince oneself of this one need only
remember what things are done in every state, in the name of order and the
public welfare, of which the execution always falls to the army. All civil
outbreaks for dynastic or other party reasons, all the executions that follow on
such disturbances, all repression of insurrections, and military intervention to
break up meetings and to suppress strikes, all forced extortion of taxes, all
the iniquitous distributions of land, all the restrictions on labor--are either
carried out directly by the military or by the police with the army at their
back. Anyone who serves his time in the army shares the responsibility of all
these things, about which he is, in some cases, dubious, while very often they
are directly opposed to his conscience. People are unwilling to be turned out of
the land they have cultivated for generations, or they are unwilling to disperse
when the government authority orders them, or they are unwilling to pay the
taxes required of them, or to recognize laws as binding on them when they have
had no hand in making them, or to be deprived of their nationality--and I, in
the fulfillment of my military duty, must go and shoot them for it. How can I
help asking myself when I take part in such punishments, whether they are just,
and whether I ought to assist in carrying them out?
Universal service is the extreme limit of
violence necessary for the support of the whole state organization, and it is
the extreme limit to which submission on the part of the subjects can go. It is
the keystone of the whole edifice, and its fall will bring it all down.
The time has come when the ever-growing abuse of
power by governments and their struggles with one another has led to their
demanding such material and even moral sacrifices from their subjects that
everyone is forced to reflect and ask himself, "Can I make these
sacrifices? And for the sake of what am I making them? I am expected for the
sake of the state to make these sacrifices, to renounce everything that can be
precious to man-- peace, family, security, and human dignity." What is this
state, for whose sake such terrible sacrifices have to be made? And why is it so
indispensably necessary? "The state," they tell us, "is
indispensably needed, in the first place, because without it we should not be
protected against the attacks of evil-disposed persons; and secondly, except for
the state we should be savages and should have neither religion, culture,
education, nor commerce, nor means of communication, nor other social
institutions; and thirdly, without the state to defend us we should be liable to
be conquered and enslaved by neighboring peoples."
"Except for the state," they say,
"we should be exposed to the attacks of evil-disposed persons in our own
country." But who are these evil-disposed persons in our midst from whose
attacks we are preserved by the state and its army? Even if, three or four
centuries ago, when men prided themselves on their warlike prowess, when killing
men was considered an heroic achievement, there were such persons; we know very
well that there are no such persons now, that we do not nowadays carry or use
firearms, but everyone professes humane principles and feels sympathy for his
fellows, and wants nothing more than we all do-- that is, to be left in peace to
enjoy his existence undisturbed. So that nowadays there are no special
malefactors from whom the state could defend us. If by these evil disposed
persons is meant the men who are punished as criminals, we know very well that
they are not a different kind of being like wild beasts among sheep, but are men
just like ourselves, and no more naturally inclined to crimes than those against
whom they commit them. We know now that threats and punishments cannot diminish
their number; that that can only be done by change of environment and moral
influence. So that the justification of state violence on the ground of the
protection it gives us from evil-disposed persons, even if it had some
foundation three or four centuries ago, has none whatever now. At present one
would rather say on the contrary that the action of the state with its cruel
methods of punishment, behind the general moral standard of the age, such as
prisons, galleys, gibbets, and guillotines, tends rather to brutalize the people
than to civilize them, and consequently rather to increase than diminish the
number of malefactors.
"Except for the state," they tell us,
"we should not have any religion, education, culture, means of
communication, and so on. Without the state men would not have been able to form
the social institutions needed for doing any thing." This argument too was
well founded only some centuries ago.
If there was a time when people were so
disunited, when they had so little means of communication and interchange of
ideas, that they could not co-operate and agree together in any common action in
commerce, economics, or education without the state as a center, this want of
common action exists no longer. The great extension of means of communication
and interchange of ideas has made men completely able to dispense with state aid
in forming societies, associations, corporations, and congresses for scientific,
economic, and political objects. Indeed government is more often an obstacle
than an assistance in attaining these aims.
From the end of last century there has hardly
been a single progressive movement of humanity which has not been retarded by
the government. So it has been with abolition of corporal punishment, of trial
by torture, and of slavery, as well as with the establishment of the liberty of
the press and the right of public meeting. In our day governments not only fail
to encourage, but directly hinder every movement by which people try to work out
new forms of life for themselves. Every attempt at the solution of the problems
of labor, land, politics, and religion meets with direct opposition on the part
of government.
"Without governments nations would be
enslaved by their neighbors." It is scarcely necessary to refute this last
argument. It carries its refutation on the face of it. The government, they tell
us, with its army, is necessary to defend us from neighboring states who might
enslave us. But we know this is what all governments say of one another, and yet
we know that all the European nations profess the same principles of liberty and
fraternity, and therefore stand in no need of protection against one another.
And if defense against barbarous nations is meant, one-thousandth part of the
troops now under arms would be amply sufficient for that purpose. We see that it
is really the very opposite of what we have been told. The power of the state,
far from being a security against the attacks of our neighbors, exposes us, on
the contrary, to much greater danger of such attacks. So that every man who is
led, through his compulsory service in the army, to reflect on the value of the
state for whose sake he is expected to be ready to sacrifice his peace,
security, and life, cannot fail to perceive that there is no kind of
justification in modern times for such a sacrifice.
And it is not only from the theoretical
standpoint that every man must see that the sacrifices demanded by the state
have no justification. Even looking at it practically, weighing, that is to say,
all the burdens laid on him by the state, no man can fail to see that for him
personally to comply with state demands and serve in the army, would, in the
majority of cases, be more disadvantageous than to refuse to do so.
If the majority of men choose to submit rather
than to refuse, it is not the result of sober balancing of advantages and
disadvantages, but because they are induced by a kind of hypnotizing process
practiced upon them. In submitting they simply yield to the suggestions given
them as orders, without thought or effort of will. To resist would need
independent thought and effort of which every man is not capable. Even apart
from the moral significance of compliance or non-compliance, considering
material advantage only, non-compliance will be more advantageous in general.
Whoever I may be, whether I belong to the
well-to-do class of the oppressors, or the working class of the oppressed, in
either case the disadvantages of non-compliance are less and its advantages
greater than those of compliance. If I belong to the minority of oppressors the
disadvantages of non-compliance will consist in my being brought to judgment for
refusing to perform my duties to the state, and if I am lucky, being acquitted
or, as is done in the case of the Mennonites in Russia, being set to work out my
military service at some civil occupation for the state; while if I am unlucky,
I may be condemned to exile or imprisonment for two or three years (I judge by
the cases that have occurred in Russia), possibly to even longer imprisonment,
or possibly to death, though the probability of that latter is very remote.
So much for the disadvantages of non-compliance.
The disadvantages of compliance will be as follows: if I am lucky I shall not be
sent to murder my fellow-creatures, and shall not be exposed to great danger of
being maimed and killed, but shall only be enrolled into military slavery. I
shall be dressed up like a clown, I shall be at the beck and call of every man
of a higher grade than my own from corporal to field-marshal, shall be put
through any bodily contortions at their pleasure, and after being kept from one
to five years I shall have for ten years afterward to be in readiness to
undertake all of it again at any minute. If I am unlucky I may, in addition, be
sent to war, where I shall be forced to kill men of foreign nations who have
done me no harm, where I may be maimed or killed, or sent to certain destruction
as in the case of the garrison of Sevastopol, and other cases in every war, or
what would be most terrible of all, I may be sent against my own compatriots and
have to kill my own brothers for some dynastic or other state interests which
have absolutely nothing to do with me. So much for the comparative
disadvantages.
The comparative advantages of compliance and
non-compliance are as follows:
For the man who submits, the advantages will be
that, after exposing himself to all the humiliation and performing all the
barbarities required of him, he may, if he escapes being killed, get a
decoration of red or gold tinsel to stick on his clown's dress; he may, if he is
very lucky, be put in command of hundreds of thousands of others as brutalized
as himself; be called a field-marshal, and get a lot of money.
The advantages of the man who refuses to obey
will consist in preserving his dignity as a man, gaining the approbation of good
men, and above all knowing that he is doing the work of God, and so undoubtedly
doing good to his fellow-men.
So much for the advantages and disadvantages of
both lines of conduct for a man of the wealthy classes, an oppressor. For a man
of the poor working class the advantages and disadvantages will be the same, but
with a great increase of disadvantages. The disadvantages for the poor man who
submits will be aggravated by the fact that he will by taking part in it, and,
as it were, assenting to it strengthen the state of subjection in which he is
held himself.
But no considerations as to how far the state is
useful or beneficial to the men who help to support it by serving in the army,
nor of the advantages or disadvantages for the individual of compliance or
non-compliance with state demands, will decide the question of the continued
existence or the abolition of government. This question will be finally decided
beyond appeal by the religious consciousness or conscience of every man who is
forced, whether he will or no, through universal conscription, to face the
question whether the state is to continue to exist or not.
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Now
to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our
Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen. Jude
1:24-25

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