Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1943 December

DEMOCRACY
(Continlted from Page 8)
COIN
MACHINE
anlEW
10
FOIl
DECEMIfR
J943
public welfare-withdrawing supplies or
services essential for health, life, or na·
tional security. Possibly worse even than
such pressure to enforce selfish demands,
is the legalized tyranny of these organiza·
tions over the individual's right to work and
the employer's right to produce.
Recent extension of such tyranny compels
an artisan, satisfying his employer, to have
trade·union fees deducted from his wages
or lose his job, even though he disapproves
of and has resigned from the trade·union
in question; and the employer must serve
the trade· union by collecting its member·
ship fee through deduction from wages.
Thus, under the guise of "maintenance
of membership", and by other methods,
the "closed shop" has been given the sta·
tus of national policy.
Moreover, especially since trades·union·
ism quarreled and split, the national war
effort has been imperiled by so·called "jur·
isdictional" strikes, to settle whether A.F.L.
or C.I.O. or another was "boss" of that
particular war effort; and no faction, after
extorting from the government dictatorial
powers over its allotted share of our war
industry, has been able to prevent "un·
authorized" strikes.
With trades·unioni~m in the forefront,
the farm and silver blocs, the huge vote
financed by unemployment and agricultural
"veterans" (past, present and future) con·
stitute a group of minority dictatorships
within the nation, whose menace outweighs
the more traditional evils of "spoils·pa-
tronage".
Every reasonable person would approve
of national groupings of workers at trades
or veterans of wars, which are organized
to promote the usefulness of such trades
or services, and to help those in need who
are or have been worthily connected there·
with; provided that such organization util-
ize their own talents and resources, without
political pressure to extort from the nation
more than is just to others-leaving ques·
tions of tate and national aid to the un-
biased judgment of all.
Such reform would greatly help to keep
upward the trend of American citizenry-
for your tolerance during these trying times.
We have appreciated your kind consideration
and hope to merit your continued cooperation
and patronage in the future. In the New Year
we wish you only the best and may yours be
a very
flrrry VIKING SPE[IALTY r.OMP ANY
530 Golden Gate Avenue
San Francisco 2. California
the character of its cItizens being the real
wealth of any Country.
XV
Few American CItizenS, except those
benefiting therefrom, will deny the major
evils indicated in the foregoing paragraphs.
Nevertheless, our citizens generally support
our present democratic practices, as a
whole, because they believe that, notwi.th.
standing such supposedly inherent eVils,
American unlimited democracy has proved
itself to be the hest form of government
the world has yet seen.
On the basis that "the proof of the pud·
ding i in the eating", they claim that the
far higher scale·of-living in the United
States- where every four and one·half per·
sons had pre-war a private automobile, and
where every working person now receives
the world' highe t wages for 40 to 48 hours
Something New Must Be Added To Help You Pay
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a week (the latter counted as 52 hours,
with 100 percent adju tment for the sev-
enth day)-demQnstrates the unique ex-
cellence of our present democratic methods.
Because we already have the best form
of government, in an ill-governed world, is
the very rea on we should eliminate its out·
standing evils; and thus provide ourselves,
and any other nations who desire and are
fit for peaceful freedom, with the type of
na tional government which is essential to
the success of any system of collective se·
curity for world peace.
Moreover, such superficial reasoning, of
those content with our present political
practices, neglects these dominating facts:
(a) We received, as a free gift so to
speak, the greatest and richest Country
ever possessed by anv Nation;
(b) We have since been living recklessly
on the capital of that vast natural wealth.
We have been consuming not only what we
produce, but also our irreplaceable natural
assets; (.f une 25, 1943, the Secretary of the
Navy predicted the exhaustion, within
twenty years, of our known oil reserves!)
(c) Fortunately, it is false that the po·
litical evi ls we have developed are inherent
in the democratic system: and
(d) Fortunately, it is true that they can
be sufficiently eradicated, if we will, with-
out domestic disturbance and with untold
benefit to national and international life.
XVI
Regarding (b)-Fertile field and prair·
ies have become barren wastes and dust·
bowls; mammoth forest have become des-
erts of stump, with consequent floods and
droughts. The more acces ible oil, gas,
coal, and minerals have been so exhausted,
that greater and more expen ive efforts are
progres ively required.
Th~re is no longer an easily penetrated
frontier, beyond which lie rich opportuni-
ties. The cream has been skimmed far and
Wanted-Radio, Rifles
Also Ba lIy King Pins, Photo matic Machines,
Photofra mes. Will pay top dollar, Any quan-
tity. Ad vise condi t ion, price, etc.
Lemke Coin Machine Co.
31 W. Vernor
Mention of THE COIN MACHINE REVIEW is your best in troduction to our a dvertisers
Detroit I , Mich .
wide, and it is not cream that rises over
night.
Moreover, national values and oppor tuni-
ties, for future generations, have been
grea tly diluted by huge immigration-much
of it of th e least desirable character. For
an improvident suffrage was slow in resist-
ing the claim of greedy .opportunists, that
any limitation on immigrant labor was
thwarting progress, by impeding the devel-
opment of the country.
Not only are we leaving skimmed and
diluted milk to future generations, but we
are saddling them with astronomical na-
tional debt. Apart {rom city, county and
sta te obligations, the national debt may
amount to 300 billions (or more) after this
Second World War-due to blind isolation-
ism for which future generations have no
responsibility.
Lest it be thought that credit is omi tted
for developments resulting in so-called per-
manent improvements, it should be noted
that the growth of population and of science
and technology (which are con tinually
changing habits of life) are tending to
make such improvements more of a liabil-
ity than an asset for future generations.
For costs of maintenance and insurance
may continue after usefulness ceases (ow-
ing to obsolescence, inadequacy and phy-
sical decay)-while interest charge on the
first cost provided by bond issues may be
never ending.
Obvious examples of obsolescence and in-
adequacy are the changes, and the conse-
quences of such changes, in methods of
transportati'on; ranging from brute power,
through steam, water and elec tri c power
to the internal combustion engine-now re:
sulting in new and vast road and air trans-
portation, further impairing th e values of
railroads and public utilities.
Moreover, the general private use of mo-
tor cars has induced a mi/1:ration to the
surrounding country, which disa trously af-
fects residential va lues in municipalities-
where mansions are being crapped, for-
merly desirable apartment houses offered
for a fraction of their bonded indebted-
ness, and owners unable to give away co-
operative apartments which recently cost
large sums. The better the residen tial prop-
erty, and the higher the corresponding
taxes, the lower the present value.
In short, the fierce upward surge of taxa-
tion (plus the servant problem) has made
it impo sible to use the accommodation
which recently housed those who paid most
of the growing municipal expenses and in-
tere t charges; so that the next generation
may be facing municipal bankruptcy. Sim-
ilar fate is, in turn, overtaking the country
properties to which those former city resi-
dents have migrated.
Above all, we were so determined to pre-
serve our unearned high scale-of-living, that
it has been chiefly responsible for the i'sola-
tionism that has caused or permitted this
Second World War; which will eventually
reduce our scale-of-living to the residue
left for spending (after taxation and other
charges) of what coming generations can
actually earn-while burdened with na-
tional debt of perhaps 300 billions.
The shallow theory that "domestic debts
do not matter" is possibly tenable in a com-
pletely communistic state--which may be
what its proponents want. But let us hope
that such condition will never prevail in
the United States of America.
Tho Oubtand-
ing Ball Gum
V~ndor -
with
·a
fuelnatlng
amu •• ment fea.
tUro. IT BATS
THEBALL
THRU THE
AIR. I Homo
Run (with 25
Lb. carton
ball
lum)
XVII
It seems crystal clear that the amazing
improvidence and i'mpotence of democratic
statecraft , and the carrying of national
"politics" hinged on isolationism into th e
conduct of world affairs, are chiefly respon-
sible for this Second World War in 21
years. Failing adequate change in the char-
acter and potency of such statecraft, each
succeedin g generation may face the fact
or the threat of similar world de truction_
This bankruptcy of democratic state-
craft has caused monstrous absurdity in the
world's status; for the only present form of
national government is one or the other of
two opposite extremes which cannot live
at peace in the same world.
Pointing the apex of th at absurdity, the
recent failures of democracy in five of the
Great Powers show that the deficiencies of
current democracy have, by reaction, crea-
ted the very dictatorship which are now
all-out to destroy the two remain in g Great
Democracies.
Obviously, the greatest and most impera-
tive need of democracy and of the world
is a kind of national government which will
generate peaceful adhere nts rath er than
deadly enemies; and the greatest contribu-
tion Ameri'c a can make to the welfare of
both herself and the world is to provide
that essential form of democratic govern-
ment_
IC we will, this vital result may be at-
tained by merely eliminating from our
own democracy its indicated ou tstandin /1:
evils; which are largely due to unrestricted
suffra ge expressed in frequency of elections,
requiring ceaseles building and rebuilding
of individual and party "political fences"-
and somewhat to the prt'sent tructure of
the Senate_
(The third, and final, installment in this
unusual and informative essay, dealing with
"Proposed Remedies" will appear in the
next issue.)
*
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MODEL V
Truly a Great Ven·
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thin9-nO additional
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merchandise -
or
1000 to 1200 balls
of 9um. Standard
Finish Model V only,
$8 . 50 Each.
R. A. PARINA & COMPANY
San Francisco 3, Calif.
FOil
DECEMIfIt
J943 •
Victor's TOPPER
Tops in Modern
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of 9um.) When or-
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ball 9um please
specify.
* *
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Topper only • • •
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celain Finish $1.00
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Terms: '13 Cash, balance C.O.D. lor send
full amount and save C.O.D. charges.)
Products of VICTOR VENDING CORP.
PACIFIC COAST DISTRIBUTORS
RELIABLE NUT CO.
1823 South Hope St.
LOS ANGELES, CAL.
Mention of THE COIN MACHINE REVIEW is your best introduction to our advertisers
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MACHINE
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BOME BON

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