EVERYTHING that can be said about the suffrage may be summed
up in a sentence.
To vote is to give up your own power.
To elect a master or many, for a long or short time, is to
resign one's liberty.
Call it an absolute monarch, a constitutional king, or a
simple M.P., the candidate that you raise to the throne, to the seat, or to the
easy chair, he will always be your master. They are persons that you put
"above" the law, since they have the power of making the laws, and
because it is their mission to see that they are obeyed.
To vote is befitting of idiots.
It is as foolish as believing that men, of the same make as
ourselves, will acquire in a moment, at the ringing of a bell, the knowledge
and the understanding of everything. Of course it is so. Your elected person
shall have to legislate on every subject under the moon; how a box of matches
should or should not be made, or how to make war; how to improve the
agriculture, or how best to kill a tribe of Arabs or a few Negroes. Probably
you believe that their intelligence will grow in proportion to the variety of
subjects they have to give their minds to; but history and experience teaches
otherwise.
The possession of power has a maddening influence;
parliaments have always wrought unhappiness.
In ruling assemblies, in a fatal manner, the will prevails
of those below the average, both morally and intellectually.
To vote is to prepare shameful treachery and traitors.
Electors do certainly believe in the honesty of the
candidates, and this is to a certain extent existing while the fervor and the
heat of the contest remains.
But every day has its tomorrow As soon as the conditions
alter, likewise do men change. To-day your candidate bows humbly before your
presence; to-morrow he will say "pish" to you. From a cadger of votes
he has turned to be a master of yours.
How can a worker, enrolled by you amongst the ruling class,
be the same as before, since now he can speak in terms of equality with the
other oppressors? Look at the servility of any one of them, written all over
his face, after paying a call to a "captain of industry," or when the
King invites him to the ante-chamber of his court!
The atmosphere of the "House" is not for deep
breathing; it is corrupt. If you send one of yourselves in a foul place, you
must not be surprised afterwards if he comes back in a rotten condition.
Therefore, do not part with your freedom.
Don't vote!
Instead of intrusting the defence of your interests to
Others, see to the matter by yourselves. Instead of trying to choose advisers
that will guide you in future actions, do the thing yourselves, and do it now!
Men of good will shall not have to look long in vain for the opportunity.
To put on others' shoulders the responsibility of one's
actions is cowardice.
Don't vote!
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