Source: Socialist Appeal, Vol. 4 No. 12, 23 March 1940, p. 4.
Transcription/HTML Markup: 2018 by Einde O’Callaghan.
Public Domain: Joseph Hansen Internet Archive 2018; This work is completely free. In any reproduction, we ask that you cite this Internet address and the publishing information above.
In his article published in the March 2 issue of the Workers Age, official organ of the Lovestoneites, Mr. Graham places the label “Trotskyite Super ‘Ham-and-Eggs’ Plan” upon the emergency demands which the Socialist Workers Party suggests the labor movement make upon Congress. These demands include the following immediate legislation: $10,000,000,000 for the unemployed, a 30-hour week at minimum pay of $30, disability and old age pensions of $30 a week, and $3,000,000,000 for the youth.
Such demands, claims Mr. Graham, are not feasible under capitalism and therefore should not be raised by the labor movement. He attempts to prove this by pointing to the national income and the federal income and then deducing that these sums are not large enough to carry out the demands of the suggested program. Such arguments, we note in passing, are the stock in trade of all the attorneys of the capitalist system from the Chamber of Commerce right down to the most miserable pettifogging labor lieutenant of Wall Street.
(Mr. Graham draws the moral that our suggesting such demands indicates “again and once again the Stalinists and Trotskyists have something in common – an unprincipled and demagogic appeal to the backwardness and illusions of the masses.” This from the Lovestoneites who white washed the Moscow Trials and who are now shouting that it is possible – under capitalism! – to “Keep America Out of War.”)
Are these emergency demands feasible? Is there not enough wealth available in the United States to provide food, clothing, shelter, and jobs for everyone immediately? Let us see.
If it is merely a question of raising the national income or of providing the necessary funds which Mr. Graham believes the present federal income could not provide (under the present tax structure controlled by Wall Street), here are some practical proposals which if carried out would immediately make possible not only the granting of the above emergency demands but far bigger and more important needs of the poverty-stricken levels of the populace:
Any one of the above three proposals, or all three taken together, if carried out, would provide the ‘answer to Mr. Graham’s objections that there aren’t enough funds available. And as a starter, just to relieve the worst cases now awaiting the pleasure of the relief authorities, how about the approximately $18,000,000,000 in pure gold now lying idle in the vaults at Fort Knox? Why not put this money to work relieving human distress? Why not distribute it immediately as a bonus to the unemployed, the underpaid, the aged, the youth, and the disabled while Congress gets the machine greased to put into effect the proposals which would have a more permanent effect?
To add up our proposed demands on a capitalist adding machine as
the Lovestoneites have done – in an attempt to prove solely on
the basis of the present national income under capitalism in its
death agony and the present tax structure as controlled by Wall
Street that these demands are not feasible – is sheer
blockheadedness, an unprincipled and demagogic appeal to the
backwardness and illusions of the masses.
We cannot agree with the implications of Mr. Graham’s article that the unemployed, the youth, the aged, and the disabled are doomed to suffer without hope of any gains whatsoever until socialism is securely established. A militant fight on the part of the masses for emergency appropriations by the present Congress would bring greater returns than even those outlined in the program carried on our front page masthead, if the militant fight mobilized the entire working class for the demands.
This program, we are the first to point out, does not offer a permanent solution. We have never claimed that it would. Only socialism can do that. Our entire program is designed to reach that permanent solution, to provide the oppressed masses with a program which will show them the road to that permanent solution.
But there is absolutely ho reason for anyone in a land as rich as this going hungry, ill-clothed, or shelterless while the toilers are organizing for socialism. Emergency appropriations by Congress are in order to relieve the present nationwide distress immediately. It is high time that the labor movement pitted its colossal power in a struggle for this elementary right.
(A third article on this question will appear next week.)
Last updated on: 18 July 2018