How social pressures in England and northern Europe
led to capitalism as we know it to solve social problems.
"In eighteenth-century England, the land could support only six million
people at a very low standard of living. Today more than fifty million
people enjoy a much higher standard of living than even the rich enjoyed
during the eighteenth-century. And today’s standard of living in
England would probably be still higher, had not a great deal of the
energy of the British been wasted in what were, from various points of
view, avoidable political and military “adventures.”"
Great contrast.
"These are the facts about capitalism. Thus, if an Englishman-or, for
that matter, any other man in any country of the world-says today to his
friends that he is opposed to capitalism, there is a wonderful way to
answer him: “You know that the population of this planet is now ten
times greater than it was in the ages preceding capitalism; you know
that all men today enjoy a higher standard of living than your ancestors
did before the age of capitalism. But how do you know that you are the
one out of ten who would have lived in the absence of capitalism? The
mere fact that you are living today is proof that capitalism has
succeeded, whether or not you consider your own life very valuable.”"
I love it.
"In spite of all its benefits, capitalism has been furiously attacked
and criticized. It is necessary that we understand the origin of this
antipathy. It is a fact that the hatred of capitalism originated not
with the masses, not among the workers themselves, but among the landed
aristocracy-the gentry, the nobility, of England and the European
continent. They blamed capitalism for something that was not very
pleasant for them: at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the
higher wages paid by industry to its workers forced the landed gentry to
pay equally higher wages to their agricultural workers. The aristocracy
attacked the industries by criticising the standard of living of the
masses of the workers.
Of course-from our viewpoint, the workers’ standard of living was
extremely low; conditions under early capitalism were absolutely
shocking, but not because the newly developed capitalistic industries
had harmed the workers. The people hired to work in factories had
already been existing at a virtually subhuman level."
People didn't move to cities to lower their standard of living. They moved their to raise it.
"The famous old story, repeated hundreds of times, that the factories
employed women and children and that these women and children, before
they were working in factories, had lived under satisfactory conditions,
is one of the greatest falsehoods of history. The mothers who worked in
the factories had nothing to cook with; they did not leave their homes
and their kitchens to go into the factories, they went into factories
because they had no kitchens, and if they had a kitchen they had no food
to cook in those kitchens. And the children did not come from
comfortable nurseries. They were starving and dying. And all the talk
about the so-called unspeakable horror of early capitalism can be
refuted by a single statistic: precisely in these years in which British
capitalism developed, precisely in the age called the Industrial
Revolution in England, in the years from 1760 to 1830, precisely in
those years the population of England doubled, which means that hundreds
or thousands of children-who would have died in preceding
times-survived and grew to become men and women."
This is a great excerpt.
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