[Delivered at a Joint Session of the Two Houses of Congress,
December 7, 1915.]
GENTLEMEN OF THE CONGRESS
¶1
Since I last had the privilege of addressing you on the state of the
Union the war of nations on the other side of the sea, which had then
only begun to disclose its portentous proportions, has extended its
threatening and sinister scope until it has swept within its flame
some portion of every quarter of the globe, not excepting our own
hemisphere, has altered the whole face of international affairs, and
now presents a prospect of reorganization and reconstruction such as
statesmen and peoples have never been called upon to attempt
before.
¶2
We have stood apart, studiously neutral. It was our manifest duty to
do so. Not only did we have no part or interest in the policies which
seem to have brought the conflict on; it was necessary, if a
universal catastrophe was to be avoided, that a limit should be set
to the sweep of destructive war and that some part of the great
family of nations should keep the processes of peace alive, if only
to prevent collective economic ruin and the breakdown throughout the
world of the industries by which its populations are fed and
sustained. It was manifestly the duty of the self-governed nations of
this hemisphere to redress, if possible, the balance of economic loss
and confusion in the other, if they could do nothing more. In the day
of readjustment and recuperation we earnestly hope and believe that
they can be of infinite service.
¶3
In this neutrality, to which they were bidden not only by their
separate life and their habitual detachment from the politics of
Europe but also by a clear perception of international duty, the
states of America have become conscious of a new and more vital
community of interest and moral partnership in affairs, more clearly
conscious of the many common sympathies and interests and duties
which bid them stand together.
¶4
There was a time in the early days of our own great nation and of the
republics fighting their way to independence in Central and South
America when the government of the United States looked upon itself
as in some sort the guardian of the republics to the south of her as
against any encroachments or efforts at political control from the
other side of the water; felt it its duty to play the part even
without invitation from them; and I think that we can claim that the
task was undertaken with a true and disinterested enthusiasm for the
freedom of the Americas and the unmolested self government of her
independent peoples. But it was always difficult to maintain such a
role without offense to the pride of the peoples whose freedom of
action we sought to protect, and without provoking serious
misconceptions of our motives, and every thoughtful man of affairs
must welcome the altered circumstances of the new day in whose light
we now stand, when there is no claim of guardianship or thought of
wards but, instead, a full and honorable association as of partners
between ourselves and our neighbors, in the interest of all America,
north and south. Our concern for the independence and prosperity of
the states of Central and South America is not altered. We retain
unabated the spirit that has inspired us throughout the whole life of
our government and which was so frankly put into words by President
Monroe. We still mean always to make a common cause of national
independence and of political liberty in America. But that purpose is
now better understood so far as it concerns ourselves. It is known
not to be a selfish purpose. It is known to have in it no thought of
taking advantage of any government in this hemisphere or playing its
political fortunes for our own benefit. All the governments of
America stand, so far as we are concerned, upon a footing of genuine
equality and unquestioned independence.
¶5
We have been put to the test in the case of Mexico, and we have stood
the test. Whether we have benefitted Mexico by the course we have
pursued remains to be seen. Her fortunes are in her own hands. But we
have at least proved that we will not take advantage of her in her
distress and undertake to impose upon her an order and government of
our own choosing. Liberty is often a fierce and intractable thing, to
which no bounds can be set, and to which no bounds of a few men's
choosing ought ever to be set. Every American who has drunk at the
true fountains of principle and tradition must subscribe without
reservation to the high doctrine of the Virginia Bill of Rights,
which in the great days in which our government was set up was
everywhere amongst us accepted as the creed of free men. That
doctrine is, "That government is, or ought to be, instituted for the
common benefit, protection, and security of the people, nation, or
community"; that "of all the various modes and forms of government,
that is the best which is capable of producing the greatest degree of
happiness and safety, and is most effectually secured against the
danger of maladministration; and that, when any government shall be
found inadequate or contrary to these purposes, a majority of the
community hath an indubitable, inalienable, and indefeasible right to
reform, alter, or abolish it, in such manner as shall be judged most
conducive to the public weal." We have unhesitatingly applied that
heroic principle to the case of Mexico, and now hopefully await the
rebirth of the troubled Republic, which had so much of which to purge
itself and so little sympathy from any outside quarter in the radical
but necessary process. We will aid and befriend Mexico, but we will
not coerce her; and our course with regard to her ought be sufficient
proof to all America that we seek no political suzerainty selfish
control.
¶6
The moral is, that the states of America are not hostile rivals but
cooperating friends, and that their growing sense of community or
interest, alike in matters political and in matters economic, is
likely to give them a new significance as factors in international
affairs and in the political history of the world. It presents them
as in a very deep and true sense a unit in world affairs, spiritual
partners, standing together because thinking together, quick with
common sympathies and common ideals. Separated they are subject to
all the cross currents of the confused politics of a world of hostile
rivalries; united in spirit and purpose they cannot be disappointed
of their peaceful destiny.
¶7
This is Pan-Americanism. It has none of the spirit of empire in it.
It is the embodiment, the effectual embodiment, of the spirit of law
and independence and liberty and mutual service.
¶8
A very notable body of men recently met in the City of Washington, at
the invitation and as the guests of this Government, whose
deliberations are likely to be looked back to as marking a memorable
turning point in the history of America. They were representative
spokesmen of the several independent states of this hemisphere and
were assembled to discuss the financial and commercial relations of
the republics of the two continents which nature and political
fortune have so intimately linked together. I earnestly recommend to
your perusal the reports of their proceedings and of the actions of
their committees. You will get from them, I think, a fresh conception
of the ease and intelligence and advantage with which Americans of
both continents may draw together in practical cooperation and of
what the material foundations of this hopeful partnership of interest
must consist, -- of how we should build them and of how necessary it
is that we should hasten their building.
¶9
There is, I venture to point out, an especial significance just now
attaching to this whole matter of drawing the Americans together in
bonds of honorable partnership and mutual advantage because of the
economic readjustments which the world must inevitably witness within
the next generation, when peace shall have at last resumed its
healthful tasks. In the performance of these tasks I believe the
Americas to be destined to play their parts together. I am interested
to fix your attention on this prospect now because unless you take it
within your view and permit the full significance of it to command
your thought I cannot find the right light in which to set forth the
particular matter that lies at the very font of my whole thought as I
address you today. I mean national defense.
¶10
No one who really comprehends the spirit of the great people for whom
we are appointed to speak can fail to perceive that their passion is
for peace, their genius best displayed in the practice of the arts of
peace. Great democracies are not belligerent. They do not seek or
desire war. Their thought is of individual liberty and of the free
labor that supports life and the uncensored thought that quickens it.
Conquest and dominion are not in our reckoning, or agreeable to our
principles. But just because we demand unmolested development and the
undisturbed government of our own lives upon our own principles of
right and liberty, we resent, from whatever quarter it may come, the
aggression we ourselves will not practice. We insist upon security in
prosecuting our self chosen lines of national development. We do more
than that. We demand it also for others. We do not confine our
enthusiasm for individual liberty and free national development to
the incidents and movements of affairs which affect only ourselves.
We feel it wherever there is a people that tries to walk in these
difficult paths of independence and right. From the first we have
made common cause with all partisans of liberty on this side the sea,
and have deemed it as important that our neighbors should be free
from all outside domination as that we ourselves should be; have set
America aside as a whole for the uses of independent nations and
political freemen.
¶11
Out of such thoughts grow all our policies. We regard war merely as a
means of asserting the rights of a people against aggression. And we
are as fiercely jealous of coercive or dictatorial power within our
own nation as of aggression from without. We will not maintain a
standing army except for uses which are as necessary in times of
peace as in times of war; and we shall always see to it that our
military peace establishment is no larger than is actually and
continuously needed for the uses of days in which no enemies move
against us. But we do believe in a body of free citizens ready and
sufficient to take care of themselves and of the governments which
they have set up to serve them. In our constitutions themselves we
have commanded that "the right of the people to keep and bear arms
shall not be infringed," and our confidence has been that our safety
in times of danger would lie in the rising of the nation to take care
of itself, as the farmers rose at Lexington.
¶12
But war has never been a mere matter of men and guns. It is a thing
of disciplined might. If our citizens are ever to fight effectively
upon a sudden summons, they must know how modern fighting is done,
and what to do when the summons comes to render them elves
immediately available and immediately effective. And the government
must be their servant in this matter, must supply them with the
training they need to take care of themselves and of it. The military
arm of their government, which they will not allow to direct them,
they may properly use to serve them and make their independence
secure, and not their own independence merely but the rights also of
those with whom they have made common cause, should they also be put
in jeopardy. They must be fitted to play the great role in the world,
and particularly in this hemisphere, for which they are qualified by
principle and by chastened ambition to play.
¶13
It is with these ideals in mind that the plans of the Department of
War for more adequate national defense were conceived which will be
laid before you, and which I urge you to sanction and put into effect
as soon as they can be properly scrutinized and discussed. They seem
to me the essential first steps, and they seem to me for the present
sufficient.
¶14
They contemplate an increase of the standing force of the regular
army from its present strength of five thousand and twenty-three
officers and one hundred and two thousand nine hundred and
eighty-five enlisted men of all services to a strength of seven
thousand one hundred and thirty-six officers and one hundred and
thirty-four thousand seven hundred enlisted men, or 141,843, all
told, all services, rank and file, by the addition of fifty-two
companies of coast artillery, fifteen companies of engineers, ten
regiments of infantry, four regiments of field artillery, and four
aero squadrons, besides seven hundred and fifty officers required for
a great variety of extra service, especially the all important duty
of training the citizen force of which I shall presently speak, seven
hundred and ninety-two noncommissioned officers for service in drill,
recruiting and the like, and the necessary quota of enlisted men for
the Quartermaster Corps, the Hospital Corps, the Ordnance Department,
and other similar auxiliary services. These are the additions
necessary to render the army adequate for its present duties, duties
which it has to perform not only upon our own continental coasts and
borders and at our interior army posts, but also in the Philippines,
in the Hawaiian Islands, at the Isthmus, and in Porto Rico.
¶15
By way of making the country ready to assert some part of its real
power promptly and upon a larger scale, should occasion arise, the
plan also contemplates supplementing the army by a force of four
hundred thousand disciplined citizens, raised in increments of one
hundred and thirty-three thousand a year throughout a period of three
years. This it is proposed to do by a process of enlistment under
which the serviceable men of the country would be asked to bind
themselves to serve with the colors for purposes of training for
short periods throughout three years, and to come to the colors at
call at any time throughout an additional "furlough" period of three
years. This force of four hundred thousand men would be provided with
personal accoutrements as fast as enlisted and their equipment for
the field made ready to be supplied at any time. They would be
assembled for training at stated intervals at convenient places in
association with suitable units of the regular army. Their period of
annual training would not necessarily exceed two months in the
year.
¶16
It would depend upon the patriotic feeling of the younger men of the
country whether they responded to such a call to service or not. It
would depend upon the patriotic spirit of the employers of the
country whether they made it possible for the younger men in their
employ to respond under favorable conditions or not. I, for one, do
not doubt the patriotic devotion either of our young men or of those
who give them employment, those for whose benefit and protection they
would in fact enlist. I would look forward to the success of such an
experiment with entire confidence.
¶17
At least so much by way of preparation for defense seems to me to be
absolutely imperative now. We cannot do less.
¶18
The programme which will be laid before you by the Secretary of the
Navy is similarly conceived. It involves only a shortening of the
time within which plans long matured shall be carried out; but it
does make definite and explicit a programme which has heretofore been
only implicit, held in the minds of the Committees on Naval Affairs
and disclosed in the debates of the two Houses but nowhere formulated
or formally adopted. It seems to me very clear that it will be to the
advantage of the country for the Congress to adopt a comprehensive
plan for putting the navy upon a final footing of strength and
efficiency and to press that plan to completion within the next five
years. We have always looked to the navy of the country as our first
and chief line of defense; we have always seen it to be our manifest
course of prudence to be strong on the seas. Year by year we have
been creating a navy which now ranks very high indeed among the
navies of the maritime nations. We should now definitely determine
how we shall complete what we have begun, and how soon.
¶19
The programme to be laid before you contemplates the construction
within five years of ten battleships, six battle cruisers, ten scout
cruisers, fifty destroyers, fifteen fleet submarines, eighty-five
coast submarines, four gunboats, one hospital ship, two ammunition
ships, two fuel oil ships, and one repair ship. It is proposed that
of this number we shall the first year provide for the construction
of two battleships, two battle cruisers, three scout cruisers,
fifteen destroyers, five fleet submarines, twenty-five coast
submarines, two gunboats, and one hospital ship; the second year, two
battleships, one scout cruiser' ten destroyers, four fleet
submarines, fifteen coast submarines, one gunboat, and one fuel oil
ship; the third year, two battleships, one battle cruiser. two scout
cruisers, five destroyers, two fleet submarines, and fifteen coast
submarines; the fourth year, two battle ships, two battle cruisers,
two scout cruisers, ten destroyers, two fleet submarines, fifteen
coast submarines, one ammunition ship, and one fuel oil ship; and the
fifth year, two battleships, one battle cruiser, two scout cruisers,
ten destroyers, two fleet submarines, fifteen coast submarines, one
gunboat, one ammunition ship, and one repair ship.
¶20
The Secretary of the Navy is asking also for the immediate addition
to the personnel of the navy of seven thousand five hundred sailors,
twenty-five hundred apprentice seamen, and fifteen hundred marines.
This increase would be sufficient to care for the ships which are to
be completed within the fiscal year 1917 and also for the number of
men which must be put in training to man the ships which will be
completed early in 1918. It is also necessary that the number of
midshipmen at the Naval academy at Annapolis should be increased by
at least three hundred in order that the force of officers should be
more rapidly added to; and authority is asked to appoint, for
engineering duties only, approved graduates of engineering colleges,
and for service in the aviation corps a certain number of men taken
from civil life.
¶21
If this full programme should be carried out we should have built or
building in 1921, according to the estimates of survival and
standards of classification followed by the General Board of the
Department, an effective navy consisting of twenty-seven battleships
of the first line, six battle cruisers, twenty-five battleships of
the second line, ten armored cruisers, thirteen scout cruisers, five
first class cruisers, three second class cruisers, ten third class
cruisers, one hundred and eight destroyers, eighteen fleet
submarines, one hundred and fifty-seven coast submarines, six
monitors, twenty gunboats, four supply ships, fifteen fuel ships,
four transports, three tenders to torpedo vessels, eight vessels of
special types, and two ammunition ships. This would be a navy fitted
to our needs and worthy of our traditions.
¶22
But armies and instruments of war are only part of what has to be
considered if we are to provide for the supreme matter of national
self-sufficiency and security in all its aspects. There are other
great matters which will be thrust upon our attention whether we will
or not. There is, for example, a very pressing question of trade and
shipping involved in this great problem of national adequacy. It is
necessary for many weighty reasons of national efficiency and
development that we should have a great merchant marine. The great
merchant fleet we once used to make us rich, that great body of
sturdy sailors who used to carry our flag into every sea, and who
were the pride and often the bulwark of the nation, we have almost
driven out of existence by inexcusable neglect and indifference and
by a hopelessly blind and provincial policy of so-called economic
protection. It is high time we repaired our mistake and resumed our
commercial independence on the seas.
¶23
For it is a question of independence. If other nations go to war or
seek to hamper each other's commerce, our merchants, it seems, are at
their mercy, to do with as they please. We must use their ships, and
use them as they determine. We have not ships enough of our own. We
cannot handle our own commerce on the seas. Our independence is
provincial, and is only on land and within our own borders. We are
not likely to be permitted to use even the ships of other nations in
rivalry of their own trade, and are without means to extend our
commerce even where the doors are wide open and our goods desired.
Such a situation is not to be endured. It is of capital importance
not only that the United States should be its own carrier on the seas
and enjoy the economic independence which only an adequate merchant
marine would give it, but also that the American hemisphere as a
whole should enjoy a like independence and self-sufficiency, if it is
not to be drawn into the tangle of European affairs. Without such
independence the whole question of our political unity and self
determination is very seriously clouded and complicated indeed.
¶24
Moreover, we can develop no true or effective American policy without
ships of war, but ships of peace, carrying goods and carrying much
more: creating friendships and rendering indispensable services to
all interests on this side the water. They must move constantly back
and forth between the Americas. They are the only shuttles that can
weave the delicate fabric of sympathy, comprehension, confidence, and
mutual dependence in which we wish to clothe our policy of America
for Americans.
¶25
The task of building up an adequate merchant marine for America
private capital must ultimately undertake and achieve, as it has
undertaken and achieved every other like task amongst us in the past,
with admirable enterprise, intelligence, and vigor; and it seems to
me a manifest dictate of wisdom that we should promptly remove every
legal obstacle that may stand in the way of this much to be desired
revival of our old independence and should facilitate in every
possible way the building, purchase, and American registration of
ships. But capital cannot accomplish this great task of a sudden. It
must embark upon it by degrees, as the opportunities of trade
develop. Something must be done at once; done to open routes and
develop opportunities where they are as yet undeveloped; done to open
the arteries of trade where the currents have not yet learned to run,
especially between the two American continents, where they are,
singularly enough, yet to be created and quickened; and it is evident
that only the government can undertake such beginnings and assume the
initial financial risks. When the risk has passed and private capital
begins to find its way in sufficient abundance into these new
channels, the government may withdraw. But it cannot mit to begin. It
should take the first steps, and should take them at once. Our goods
must not lie piled up at our ports and stored upon side tracks in
freight cars which are daily needed on the roads; must not be left
without means of transport to any foreign quarter. We must not await
the permission of foreign ship-owners and foreign governments to send
them where we will.
¶26
With a view to meeting these pressing necessities of our commerce and
availing ourselves at the earliest possible moment of the present
unparalleled opportunity of linking the two Americas together in
bonds of mutual interest and service, an opportunity which may never
return again if we miss it now, proposals will be made to the present
Congress for the purchase or construction of ships to be owned and
directed by the government similar to those made to the last
Congress, but modified in some essential particulars. I recommend
these proposals to you for your prompt acceptance with the more
confidence because every month that has elapsed since the former
proposals were made has made the necessity for such action more and
more manifestly imperative. That need was then foreseen; it is now
acutely felt and everywhere realized by those for whom trade is
waiting but who can find no conveyance for their goods. I am not so
much interested in the particulars of the programme as I am in taking
immediate advantage of the great opportunity which awaits us if we
will but act in this emergency. In this matter, as in all others, a
spirit of common counsel should prevail, and out of it should come an
early solution of this pressing problem.
¶27
There is another matter which seems to me to be very intimately
associated with the question of national safety and preparation for
defense. That is our policy towards the Philippines and the people of
Porto Rico. Our treatment of them and their attitude towards us are
manifestly of the first consequence in the development of our duties
in the world and in getting a free hand to perform those duties. We
must be free from every unnecessary burden or embarrassment; and
there is no better way to be clear of embarrassment than to fulfil
our promises and promote the interests of those dependent on us to
the utmost. Bills for the alteration and reform of the government of
the Philippines and for rendering fuller political justice to the
people of Porto Rico were submitted to the sixty-third Congress. They
will be submitted also to you. I need not particularize their
details. You are most of you already familiar with them. But I do
recommend them to your early adoption with the sincere conviction
that there are few measures you could adopt which would more
serviceably clear the way for the great policies by which we wish to
make good, now and always, our right to lead in enterprises of peace
and good will and economic and political freedom.
¶28
The plans for the armed forces of the nation which I have outlined,
and for the general policy of adequate preparation for mobilization
and defense, involve of course very large additional expenditures of
money, expenditures which will considerably exceed the estimated
revenues of the government. It is made my duty by law, whenever the
estimates of expenditure exceed the estimates of revenue, to call the
attention of the Congress to the fact and suggest any means of
meeting the deficiency that it may be wise or possible for me to
suggest. I am ready to believe that it would be my duty do so in any
case; and I feel particularly bound to speak of the latter when it
appears that the deficiency will arise directly out of the adoption
by the Congress of measures which I myself urge it to adopt. Allow
me, therefore, to speak briefly of the present state of the Treasury
and of the fiscal problems which the next year will probably
disclose.
¶29
On the thirtieth of June last there was an available balance in the
general fund of the Treasury of $104,170,105.78. The total estimated
receipts for the year 1916, on the assumption that the emergency
venue measure passed by the last Congress will not be extended beyond
its present limit, the thirty-first of December, 1915, and that the
present duty of one cent per pound on sugar will be discontinued
after the first of May, 1916, will be $670,365,500. The balance June
last and these estimated revenues come, therefore, to a grand total
of $774,535,605.78. The total estimated disbursements for the present
fiscal year, including twenty-five millions for the Panama Canal,
twelve millions for probable deficiency appropriations, and fifty
thousand dollars for miscellaneous debt redemptions, will be
53,891,000; and the balance in the general fund of the Treasury will
be reduced to $20,644.605.78. The emergency revenue act, if continued
beyond its present time limitation, would produce, during the half
year then remaining, about forty-one millions. The duty of one cent
per pound on sugar, if continued, would produce during the two months
of the fiscal year remaining after the first of May, about fifteen
millions. These two sums, amounting together to fifty-six millions,
if added to the revenues of the second half of the fiscal year, would
yield the Treasury at the end of the year an available balance of
$76,644,605.78.
¶30
The additional revenues required to carry out the programme of
military and naval preparation of which I have spoken, would, as at
present estimated, be for the fiscal year 1917, $93,800,000. Those
figures, taken with the figures for the present fiscal year which I
have already given, disclose our financial problem for the year 1917.
Assuming that the taxes imposed by the emergency revenue act and the
present duty on sugar are to be discontinued, and that the balance at
the close of the present fiscal year will be only $20,644,605.78,
that the disbursements for the Panama Canal will again be about
twenty-five millions, and that the additional expenditures for the
army and navy are authorized by the Congress, the deficit in the
general fund of the Treasury on the thirtieth of June 1917, will be
nearly two hundred and thirty-five millions. To this sum at least
fifty millions should be added to represent a safe working balance
for the Treasury, and twelve millions to include the usual deficiency
estimates in 1917; and these additions would make a total deficit of
some two hundred and ninety-seven millions. If the present taxes
should be continued throughout this year and the next, however, there
would be a balance in the Treasury of some seventy-six and a half
millions at the end of the present fiscal year, and a deficit at the
and of the next year of only some fifty millions, or, reckoning in
sixty-two millions for deficiency appropriations and a safe Treasury
balance at the end of the year, a total deficit of some one hundred
and twelve millions. The obvious moral of the figures is that it is a
plain counsel of prudence to continue all of the present taxes or
their equivalents, and confine ourselves to the problem of providing
one hundred and twelve millions of new revenue rather than two
hundred and ninety-seven millions.
¶31
How shall we obtain the new revenue? We are frequently reminded that
there are many millions' of bonds which the Treasury is authorized
under existing law to sell to reimburse the sums paid out of current
revenues for the construction of the Panama Canal; and it is true
that bonds to the amount of approximately $222,000,000 are now
available for that purpose. Prior to 1913, $134,631,980 of these
bonds had actually been sold to recoup the expenditures at the
Isthmus; and now constitute a considerable item of the public debt.
But I, for one, do not believe that the people of this country
approve of postponing the payment of their bills. Borrowing money is
short-sighted finance. It can be justified only when permanent things
are to be accomplished which many generations will certainly benefit
by and which it seems hardly fair that a single generation should pay
for. The objects are now proposing to spend money for cannot be so
classified, except in the sense that everything wisely done may be
said to be done in the interest of posterity as well as in our own.
It seems to me a clear dictate of prudent statesmanship and frank
finance that in what we are now, I hope, about to undertake we should
pay as we go. The people of the country are entitled to know just
what burdens of taxation they are to carry, and to know from the
outset, now. The new bills should be paid by internal taxation.
¶32
To what sources, then, shall we turn? This is so peculiarly a
question which the gentlemen of the House of Representatives are
expected under the Constitution to propose an answer to that you will
hardly expect me to do more than discuss it in very general terms. We
should be following an almost universal example of modern governments
if we were to draw the greater part or even the whole of the revenues
we need from the income taxes. By somewhat lowering the present
limits of exemption and the figure at which the surtax shall begin to
be imposed, and by increasing, step by step throughout the present
graduation, the surtax itself, the income taxes as at present
apportioned would yield sums sufficient to balance the books of the
Treasury at the end of the fiscal year 1917 without anywhere making
the burden unreasonably or oppressively heavy. The precise reckonings
are fully and accurately set out in the report of the Secretary of
the Treasury which will be immediately laid before you.
¶33
And there are many additional sources of revenue which can justly be
resorted to without hampering the industries of the country or
putting any too great charge upon individual expenditure. A tax of
one cent per gallon on gasoline and naphtha would yield, at the
present estimated production, $10,000,000; a tax of fifty cents per
horse power on automobiles and internal explosion engines,
$15,000,000; a stamp tax on bank cheques, probably $18,000,000; a tax
of twenty-five cents per ton on pig iron, $10,000,000; a tax of
twenty-five cents per ton on fabricated iron and steel, probably
$10,000,000. In a country of great industries like this it ought to
be easy to distribute the burdens of taxation without making them
anywhere bear too heavily or too exclusively upon any one set of
persons or undertakings. What is clear is, that the industry of this
generation should pay the bills of this generation.
¶34
I have spoken to you today, Gentlemen, upon a single theme, the
thorough preparation of the nation to care for its own security and
to make sure of entire freedom to play the impartial role in this
hemisphere and in the world which we all believe to have been
providentially assigned to it. I have had in my mind no thought of my
immediate or particular danger arising out of our relations with
other nations. We are at peace with all the nations of the world, and
there is reason to hope that no question in controversy between this
and other Governments will lead to any serious breach of amicable
relations, grave as some differences of attitude and policy have been
tend may yet turn out to be. I am sorry to say that the gravest
threats against our national peace and safety have been uttered
within our own borders. There are citizens of the United States, I
blush to admit, born under other flags but welcomed under our
generous naturalization laws to the full freedom and opportunity of
America, who have poured the poison of disloyalty into the very
arteries of our national life; who have sought to bring the authority
and good name of our Government into contempt, to destroy our
industries wherever they thought it effective for their vindictive
purposes to strike at them, and to debase our politics to the uses of
foreign intrigue. Their number is not great as compared with the
whole number of those sturdy hosts by which our nation has been
enriched in recent generations out of virile foreign stock; but it is
great enough to have brought deep disgrace upon us and to have made
it necessary that we should promptly make use of processes of law by
which we may be purged of their corrupt distempers. America never
witnessed anything like this before. It never dreamed it possible
that men sworn into its own citizenship, men drawn out of great free
stocks such as supplied some of the best and strongest elements of
that little, but how heroic, nation that in a high day of old staked
its very life to free itself from every entanglement that had
darkened the fortunes of the older nations and set up a new standard
here, that men of such origins and such free choices of allegiance
would ever turn in malign reaction against the Government and people
who had welcomed and nurtured them and seek to make this proud
country once more a hot bed of European passion. A little while ago
such a thing would have seemed incredible. Because it was incredible
we made no preparation for it. We would have been almost ashamed to
prepare for it, as if we were suspicious of ourselves, our own
comrades and neighbors! But the ugly and incredible thing has
actually come about and we are without adequate federal laws to deal
with it. I urge you to enact such laws at the earliest possible
moment and feel that in doing so I am urging you to do nothing less
than save the honor and self-respect of the nation. Such creatures of
passion, disloyalty, and anarchy must be crushed out. They are not
many, but they are infinitely malignant, and the hand of our power
should close over them at once. They have formed plots to destroy
property, they have entered into conspiracies against the neutrality
of the Government, they have sought to pry into every confidential
transaction of the Government in order to serve interests alien to
our own. It is possible to deal with these things very effectually. I
need not suggest the terms in which they may be dealt with
¶35
I wish that it could be said that only a few men, misled by mistaken
sentiments of allegiance to the governments under which they were
born, had been guilty of disturbing the self-possession and
misrepresenting the temper and principles of the country during these
days of terrible war, when it would seem that every man who was truly
an American would instinctively make it his duty and his pride to
keep the scales of judgment even and prove himself a partisan of no
nation but his own. But it cannot. There are some men among us, and
many resident abroad who, though born and bred in the United States
and calling themselves Americans, have so forgotten themselves and
their honor as citizens as to put their passionate sympathy with one
or the other side in the great European conflict above their regard
for the peace and dignity of the United States. They also preach and
practice disloyalty. No laws, I suppose, can reach corruptions of the
mind and heart; but I should not speak of others without also
speaking of these and expressing the even deeper humiliation and
scorn which every self-possessed and thoughtfully patriotic American
must feel when he thinks of them and of the discredit they are daily
bringing upon us.
¶36
While we speak of the preparation of the nation to make sure of her
security and her effective power we must not fall into the patent
error of supposing that her real strength comes from armaments and
mere safeguards of written law. It comes, of course, from her people,
their energy, their success in their undertakings, their free
opportunity to use the natural resources of our great some land
and of the lands outside our continental borders which look to us
for protection, for encouragement, and for assistance in their
development; from the organization and freedom and vitality of our
economic life. The domestic questions which engaged the attention of
the last Congress are more vital to the nation in this its time of
test than at any other time. We cannot adequately make ready for any
trial of our strength unless we wisely and promptly direct the force
of our laws into these all-important fields of domestic action. A
matter which it seems to me we should have very much at heart is the
creation of the right instrumentalities by which to mobilize our
economic resources in any time of national necessity. I take it for
granted that I do not need your authority to call into systematic
consultation with the directing officers of the army and navy men of
recognized leadership and ability from among our citizens who are
thoroughly familiar, for example, with the transportation facilities
of the country and therefore competent to advise how they may be
coordinated when the need arises, those who can suggest the best way
which to bring about prompt cooperation among the manufacturers of
the country, should it be necessary, and those who could assist to
bring the technical skill of the country to the aid of the Government
in the solution of particular problems of defense. I only hope that
if I should find it feasible to constitute such an advisory body the
Congress would be willing to vote the small sum of money that would
be needed to defray the expenses that would probably be necessary to
give it the clerical and administrative machinery with which to do
serviceable work.
¶37
What is more important is, that the industries and resources of the
country should be available and ready for mobilization. It is the
more imperatively necessary, therefore, that we should promptly
devise means for doing what we have not yet done: that we should give
intelligent federal aid and stimulation to industrial and vocational
education, as we have long done in the large field of our
agricultural industry; that, at the same time that we safeguard and I
the natural resources of the country we should put them at the
disposal of those who will use them promptly and intelligently, as
was sought to be done in the admirable bills submitted to the last
Congress from its committees on the public lands, bills which I
earnestly recommend in principle to your consideration; that we
should put into early operation some provision for rural credits
which will add to the extensive borrowing facilities already afforded
the farmer by the Reserve Bank Act, adequate instrumentalities by
which long credits may be obtained on land mortgages; and that we
should study more carefully than they have hitherto been studied the
right adaptation of our economic arrangements to changing
conditions.
¶38
Many conditions about which we have repeatedly legislated are being
altered from decade to decade, it is evident, under our very eyes,
and are likely to change even more rapidly and more radically in the
days immediately ahead of us, when peace has returned to the world
and the nations of Europe once more take up their tasks of commerce
and industry with the energy of those who must bestir themselves to
build anew. Just what these changes will be no one can certainly
foresee or confidently predict. There are no calculable, because no
stable, elements in the problem. The most we can do is to make
certain that we have the necessary instrumentalities of information
constantly at our service so that we may be sure that we know exactly
what we are dealing with when we come to act, if it should be
necessary to act at all. We must first certainly know what it is that
we are seeking to adapt ourselves to. I may ask the village of
addressing you more at length on this important little later in our
session.
¶39
In the meantime may I make this suggestion? The transportation
problem is an exceedingly serious and pressing one in this country.
There has from time to time of late been reason to fear that our
railroads would not much longer be able to cope with it successfully,
as at present equipped and coordinated. I suggest that it would be
wise to provide for a commission of inquiry to ascertain by a
thorough canvass of the whole question whether our laws as at present
framed and administered are as serviceable as they might be in the
solution of the problem. It is obviously a problem that lies at the
very foundation of our efficiency as a people. Such an inquiry ought
to draw out every circumstance and opinion worth considering and we
need to know all sides of the matter if we mean to do anything in the
field of federal legislation.
¶40
No one, I am sure, would wish to take any backward step. The
regulation of the railways of the country by federal commission has
had admirable results and has fully justified the hopes and
expectations of those by whom the policy of regulation was originally
proposed. The question is not what should we undo? It is, whether
there is anything else we can do that would supply us with effective
means, in the very process of regulation, for bettering the
conditions under which the railroads are operated and for making them
more useful servants of the country as a whole. It seems to me that
it might be the part of wisdom, therefore, before further legislation
in this field is attempted, to look at the whole problem of
coordination and efficiency in the full light of a fresh assessment
of circumstance and opinion, as a guide to dealing with the several
parts of it.
¶41
For what we are seeking now, what in my mind is the single thought of
this message, is national efficiency and security. We serve a great
nation. We should serve it in the spirit of its peculiar genius. It
is the genius of common men for self-government, industry, justice,
liberty and peace. We should see to it that it lacks no instrument,
no facility or vigor of law, to make it sufficient to play its part
with energy, safety, and assured success. In this we are no partisans
but heralds and prophets of a new age.