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Special pages :
The Ideas of an Advanced Capitalist
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1977, Moscow, Volume 19, pages 275-276.
One of the richest and most eminent American merchants, a certain Edward Albert Filene, Vice-Chairman of the International Congress of Chambers of Commerce, is now touring Paris, Berlin and other big European centres to make personal contact with the most influential people of the commercial world.
At the banquets arranged, as is fitting, by the richest people of Europe in honour of one of the American rich, the latter is developing his ânewâ ideas on the world power of the merchant. Frankfurter Zeitung,[1] the organ of German finance capital, reports in detail the ideas of this âadvancedâ American millionaire.
âWe are experiencing a great historic movement,â he proclaims, âthat will end in the transfer of all power over the modern world to representatives of commercial capital. We are the people who bear the greatest responsibility in the world and we should, therefore, be politically the most influential.
âDemocracy is growing, the power of the masses is growing,â argued Mr. Filene (rather inclined, it seems, to regard those âmassesâ as simpletons). âThe cost of living is rising. Parliamentarism and the newspapers, distributed in millions of copies a day, are providing the masses of the people with ever more detailed information.
âThe masses are striving to ensure for themselves participation in political life, the extension of franchise, the introduction of an income-tax, etc. Power over the whole world must pass into the hands of the masses, that is, into the hands of our employees,â is the conclusion drawn by this worthy orator.
âThe natural leaders of the masses should be the industrialists and merchants, who are learning more and more to understand the community of their interests and those of the masses.â (We note in parenthesis that the cunning Mr. Filene is the owner of a gigantic commercial house employing 2,500 people, and that he has âorganisedâ his employees in a âdemocraticâ organisation with profit-sharing, etc. Since he considers his employees hopeless simpletons, Mr. Filene is sure that they are completely satisfied and infinitely grateful to their âfather-benefactorâ ....)
âWage increases, the improvement of labour conditions, that is what will bind our employees to us,â said Mr. Filene, âthat is what will guarantee our power over the whole world. Everybody in the world who is at all talented will come to us to enter our service.
âWe need organisation and still more organisationâstrong, democratic organisation, both national and inter national,â the American exclaimed. He called upon the commercial world of Paris, Berlin, etc., to reorganise international chambers of commerce. They should unite the merchants and industrialists of all civilised countries in a single, mighty organisation. All important international problems should be discussed and settled by that organisation.
Such are the ideas of an âadvancedâ capitalist, Mr. Filene.
The reader will see that these ideas are a paltry, narrow, one-sided, selfishly barren approximation to the ideas of Marxism propounded over sixty years ago. âWeâ are great masters at upsetting and refuting Marx; âweâ, the civilised merchants and professors of political economy, have refuted him completely!... And at the same time we steal little bits and pieces from him and boast to the whole world of our âprogressivenessâ....
My worthy Mr. Filene! Do you really believe that the workers of the whole world are actually such simpletons?
- â Frankfurter Zeitung (Frankfort Newspaper)âa bourgeois daily published in Frankfort-on-Main from 1856 to 1943.