The Aims of Labour |
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Page 5
... questions which are discussed herein . The sole purpose of this publication is to advance the social and political ideals which I have at heart , and I propose to hand over any profits resulting from the sale of the book to the fund ...
... questions which are discussed herein . The sole purpose of this publication is to advance the social and political ideals which I have at heart , and I propose to hand over any profits resulting from the sale of the book to the fund ...
Page 14
... question is not difficult . An examination of the present position of the political Labour movement will suffice to show that its form of organisation must be completely changed if it is to be enabled to meet the requirements of the new ...
... question is not difficult . An examination of the present position of the political Labour movement will suffice to show that its form of organisation must be completely changed if it is to be enabled to meet the requirements of the new ...
Page 29
... question in accordance with the opinion of localities ; we urge that the localities should have conferred upon them full power to pro- hibit the sale of liquor within their boundaries , or alternatively to decide whether the number of ...
... question in accordance with the opinion of localities ; we urge that the localities should have conferred upon them full power to pro- hibit the sale of liquor within their boundaries , or alternatively to decide whether the number of ...
Page 44
... and causes of friction between one nation and another ; a peace that will offer a real prospect of the nations living together in amity and concord . The question which then presents itself for answer is : 44 THE AIMS OF LABOUR.
... and causes of friction between one nation and another ; a peace that will offer a real prospect of the nations living together in amity and concord . The question which then presents itself for answer is : 44 THE AIMS OF LABOUR.
Page 45
Arthur Henderson. The question which then presents itself for answer is : When such a peace shall have been agreed upon , by what means can its permanency be guaranteed ? This is a matter of primary importance , for the hopes of all ...
Arthur Henderson. The question which then presents itself for answer is : When such a peace shall have been agreed upon , by what means can its permanency be guaranteed ? This is a matter of primary importance , for the hopes of all ...
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Common terms and phrases
aggression aims Allied Alsace Alsace-Lorraine AUSTRIA-HUNGARY Barnard Castle Belgium British Labour capitalist civilisation classes co-operation colonies common Conference declares conquest cracy demands demo demobilisation democratic democratic control desire domination economic economic war effective Election Empire ence enforce equality Excess Profits Tax factory fighting forces freedom future ganised German Government guarantee hand hostilities ideals Imperial individual Inter-Allied Conference interests Labour and Socialist Labour movement Labour Party holds Labour Party intends Labour Party stands League of Nations liberty material means ment methods military moral movement necessary nomic oppression organised democracy Parliament political parties popular possible practical present principles problems production profiteering proposal question railway realise recognition reconstruction regard representatives revolution sacrifice seek self-determination society spirit struggle taxation ternational territorial tion tional Trade Union Trade Union Congress unemployment United Kingdom victory wage-earners wage-slavery wages whole workers world peace
Popular passages
Page 112 - If we in Britain are to escape from the decay of civilization itself, which the Japanese statesman foresees, we must insure that what is presently to be built up is a new social order, based not on fighting, but on fraternity — not on the competitive struggle for the means of bare life, but on a deliberately planned cooperation in production and distribution for the benefit of all who participate by hand or by brain...
Page 44 - The treaties and agreements which bring it to an end must embody terms which will create a peace that is worth guaranteeing and preserving, a peace that will win the approval of mankind, not merely a peace that will serve the several interests and immediate aims of the nations engaged.
Page 119 - Nation's industry, no longer deflected by individual profiteering, on the basis of the common ownership of the means of production; the equitable sharing of the proceeds among all who participate in any capacity and only among these...
Page 126 - Infancy) which is still so scandalously insufficient; for the Aged and those prematurely incapacitated by accident or disease, now in many ways so imperfectly cared for ; for the Education alike of children, of adolescents and of adults, in which the Labour Party demands a genuine equality of opportunity, overcoming all differences of material circumstances ; and for the organisation of public improvements of all kinds, including the brightening of the lives of those now condemned to almost ceaseless...
Page 102 - Fourth, that all well-defined national aspirations shall be accorded the utmost satisfaction that can be accorded them without introducing new or perpetuating old elements of discord and antagonism that would be likely in time to break the peace of Europe and consequently of the world.
Page 64 - The time has arrived when all possible encouragement should be given to the development of imperial resources and especially to making the Empire independent of other countries in respect of food supplies, raw materials, and essential industries.
Page 109 - No annexations or punitive indemnities, and the right of all peoples to self-determination," and that they are working with all their power to obtain from their Governments the necessary guarantees to apply these principles honestly and unreservedly to all questions to be dealt with at any official peace conference.
Page 112 - ... and wage-slavery; with its glorification of the unhampered struggle for the means of life and its hypocritical pretense of the "survival of the fittest"; with the monstrous inequality of circumstances which it produces and the degradation and brutalization, both moral and spiritual, resulting therefrom, may, we hope, indeed have received a death blow.
Page 125 - In the disposal of the surplus above the Standard of Life, society has hitherto gone as far wrong as in its neglect to secure the necessary basis of any genuine industrial efficiency or decent social order. We have allowed the riches of our mines, the rental value of the lands superior to the margin of cultivation, the extra profits of the fortunate capitalists, even the material outcome of scientific discoveries — which ought by now to have made this Britain of ours immune from class poverty or...
Page 117 - ... in the first years of peace, it is essential that the Government should make all necessary preparations for putting instantly in hand, directly or through the Local Authorities, such urgently needed public works as (a) the rehousing of the population alike in rural districts, mining villages, and town slums, to the extent, possibly, of a million new cottages and an outlay of...