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MONEY, POWER, and MODERN ART
PART I: Ruthless empire builders
By
Henry C K Liu
This series appeared in Asia
Times Online in December 2004
A major event of high culture unfolded in a series of elegant
receptions during the third week of November in New York, a city of
seriously moneyed art collectors, scathing critics and a discriminating
public. Three years in design and construction, the Museum of Modern
Art reopened on its 75th anniversary with a new US$850 million building
on the same site as the old museum in midtown Manhattan. Loved by all
who have been fortunate enough to have their lives enriched by it, this
cultural flower in one of the world's greatest cities, affectionately
referred to as The Modern, has been cultivated in the supercharged
greenhouse of modernist milieu, aiming to define fundamental issues of
meaning and truth through the vehicle of esthetic preference at the
forefront of modern civilization.
The Museum of Modern Art is the beloved legacy of an extraordinary
woman of impeccable pedigree, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, born in
Providence, Rhode Island, on October 26, 1874, to elitist senator
Nelson Wilmarth Aldrich (1841-1915), the most powerful politician in a
nation rising fast as a world power at the turn of the 20th century.
Miss Aldrich was educated at home by a Quaker governess whose pacifist
philosophy placed value on inner spirituality, attentive listening,
compassion, non-violence, equality (particularly for women),
non-evangelistic worship, silent devotion, inner-directedness and
respect for consensus.
Such values, central to the ideal American character, had been coming
into increasing conflict with evolving socio-economic reality and a new
political climate as the young girl blossomed into womanhood. At 17, as
proper for young women of her privileged class, she went to Miss
Abbott's School to study English, French, German, art history, the
classics, gymnastics and dancing. After graduating, she traveled to
Europe in 1894 to view first-hand the art she had studied at school. At
age 26, she became the wife of John D Rockefeller Jr, son of the
founder of Standard Oil, the nation's wealthiest man. After a courtship
that lasted more than five years, the couple, who first met in 1894
when the groom-to-be was a student at Brown University, were finally
married at a super-lavish wedding on Warwick Neck, Rhode Island, on
October 9, 1901. The vibrant bride was given away by her powerful
father, Senator Aldrich, to the reserved heir of the nation's greatest
fortune. It was a union of wealth and power. But while John D
Rockefeller (1839-1937) created and accumulated wealth through the
brutal imposition of efficiency on a chaotic oil-refining industry, it
was Nelson Aldrich who brought about the private control of currency
that made such wealth accumulation structurally systemic.
Elected to the Senate as a Republican from Rhode Island in 1881,
Aldrich joined and eventually chaired the Senate Finance Committee,
which set tariff rates, the principal means of raising federal revenue
in the era before income tax. He was a strong proponent of protective
tariffs for the benefit of young industries in the northeast, and
helped force the populist Silver Republicans out of the party, and was
the power behind the passage of the Gold Standard Act of 1900.
In the era of state-chartered banking, banks were free-standing
individual entities that practiced predatory competition on each other
in an unregulated free market, with no sense of solidarity or common
interest as an industry nor shared responsibility to the community at
large. Faced with recurring systemic credit crunches associated with
the gold standard in an expanding economy, banks routinely engaged in
internecine competition to corner cash, deny new credit to financially
weak customers to expose them to predatory takeover raids by preferred
customers, suspend cash payments abruptly with no warning, and hoard
money regularly for profit. The sound-money regime and its associated
credit crunches periodically failed the expanding economy, resulting in
sudden layoffs of hundreds of thousands as credit-starved firms fell
into insolvency, bringing trade a standstill.
In the summer of 1907, the US economy crashed, with a large number of
big businesses and major Wall Street brokerages going bankrupt. By
October, the venerated Knickerbocker Trust in New York City and the
blue-chip Westinghouse Electric Co had both failed, touching off what
came to be known as the Banking Panic of 1907, the latest and most
severe of four nationwide banking panics that had occurred in three
decades. The stock market plummeted and panic-stricken depositors made
massive runs on the nation's banks.
Once more J P Morgan (1837-1913) acted to restore financial order. This
was not his first exercise to save finance capitalism from free market
forces, each time making his control of the financial markets more
complete. He summoned leading bankers and financial titans to his
palatial home on 36th Street and Madison Avenue in New York, where they
set up a rescue operation in his ornate library. Over the course of the
next three weeks, Morgan and his team bypassed legal constraints to
channel money from the stronger institutions they owned to the weaker
ones they had just acquired through predatory fire sales to keep the
system afloat, halting the panic with the cooperation and gratitude of
the government. Morgan strong-armed banks to agree to settle accounts
among themselves with clearinghouse certificates rather than cash and
thus increased the money supply without involving the government, and
ended up owning a much larger share of the financial sector paid for
with paper. In the finger-pointing following the crisis, reformers in
both political parties agreed that the US banking system was
fundamentally flawed and needed structural reform.
Conservative business leaders, however, held that it was president
Theodore Roosevelt's progressive agenda that had upset the natural
order of an otherwise self-balancing market and that if government
would only stop meddling in commerce, all would return to normal.
Typical of US politics, reform in form gained acceptance only by
yielding to conservatism in essence. An emerging consensus affirmed
that bank reform was indeed necessary to provide badly needed currency
elasticity, which had been a major issue in the panic. But reform was
not directed toward providing credit constructively to where the
economy needed it most, but toward achieving general soundness in the
banking system at the expense of fair competition to develop the full
potential of the economy. Under the leadership of Aldrich, Congress
responded by passing a hastily prepared stopgap legislation, the
Aldrich-Veerland Currency Act of 1908, to provide short-term aid to
distressed banks to ease the ongoing credit crunch to save big
business. The legislation allowed national banks to issue notes on a
wider range of securities than previously, with the effect of putting
more money into circulation to prevent further corporate bankruptcies.
To seek a long-range solution to the complex issue of recurring
financial crises, Congress created a National Monetary Commission
(1808-12) under the Aldrich-Veerland Currency Act, with Aldrich as
chairman, to study the matter in depth. A report recommending the
Aldrich Plan was issued by the commission four years later in 1912 and
not acted upon until 1913 at the beginning of the Democratic
administration of president Woodrow Wilson (1913-21). In 1913, Congress
passed the landmark Owen-Glass Act, which created the Federal Reserve
System to act as lender of last resort to distressed private banks.
Aldrich's work on the Aldrich-Vreeland Currency Act of 1908 and his
chairmanship of the National Monetary Commission paved the way for the
Federal Reserve Act of 1913.
Wilson, being nearly illiterate on the technicalities of banking
reform, was strongly influenced by William Jennings Bryan's populist
outlook. Bryan, a chronically unsuccessful Democratic contender for
presidency, became Wilson's secretary of state. Wilson said a year
before he was elected, "The greatest monopoly in this country is the
money supply," adding a couple of months later that he would not accept
"any plan which concentrates control in the hands of the banks". Under
Wilson, Representative Arsene P Pujo of Louisiana, chairman of the
House Banking Committee, led the Pujo Commission in 1912 in a
wide-ranging congressional hearing on the nation's financial problems.
Pujo brought in J P Morgan to testify and eventually came to the
conclusion that a "money trust" existed in the nation's financial
sector, just as "corporate trusts" existed in oil, mining and the
industrial sectors. In the view of the Pujo Commission, the
central-banking solution outlined in the Aldrich Plan as recommended by
the Monetary Commission did not solve the "money trust" problem.
The Fed is born
In 1913, the Democrat-controlled Congress adopted a regional, rather
than fully centralized, approach to banking reform. Carter Glass of
Virginia headed matters in the House and Robert L Owen of Oklahoma did
so in the Senate. The final legislation created 12 Federal Reserve
Banks that would act as central banks for all nationally chartered
banks and other state-chartered institutions that voluntarily elected
to be members. The idea of regionalism was to have a banking system
responsive to the different monetary needs of various regions in the
vast nation. The 12 Reserve Banks would not be federal bodies but
private institutions owned by the member banks of the system. The
compromise was a response to rising regional conflict rather than
conflict between private or public control of the nation's money. A
Federal Reserve Board was formed to oversee the system and establish
policy. Members of the board would be appointed by the US president,
providing a considerable measure of federal direction over the private
system. Thus, like the Supreme Court, the "politically independent"
Federal Reserve Board membership is politically appointed, albeit for
fixed terms rather than life.
A new form of currency was created: the Federal Reserve Note, which has
remained legal tender to this day, as a way to solve the problem of
monetary inelasticity, to provide a national currency that would expand
and contract as needed by the economy. The notes were to be backed by
reserves of gold of at least 40% of the face amount of the notes
issued. Government funds were to be deposited in the Reserve Banks,
which ended the old sub-treasury system. The dollar did not become a
fiat currency until 1971.
On December 23, 1913, Wilson laid to rest decades of monetary debate
when he signed the Federal Reserve Act into law. Wilson's signature
catapulted the Federal Reserve System into an monetary adventure that
would evolve from a passive institution designed to prevent banking
panics into what came to be known as a central bank, with an
independent mandate from the body politic as an active promoter of
monetary stability, a multi-faceted player and rescuer in the
ever-more-reckless financial-services industry and supremely powerful
financial arbitrager over the economy of the nation and the world, an
institution owned not by the people and controlled not by
democratically elected officials, but by political appointees
acceptable to private bankers.
The National Monetary Commission had identified two related flaws in
the nation's banking system: 1) Venerability to recurring bank panics
and 2) An inelastic currency that was unresponsive to changes in demand
in a dynamic economy. To combat these two problems, the commission made
an urgent plea for timely sovereign lending to distressed banks
(referred to as "rediscounting" in the Federal Reserve Act). The
greatest power bestowed on the new Federal Reserve system was the
setting of the discount rate - the rate of interest charged by the
Reserve Banks when lending to member institutions collateralized by
government securities. Raising the discount rate generally increases
the cost of borrowing and slows the economy, while dropping it
stimulates economic activity, since banks set their loan rates above
the discount rate, and not by market forces.
Federal Funds include funds deposited by commercial banks at the
Federal Reserve Banks, including funds in excess of bank reserve
requirements. But Fed Funds can be created at will by the Federal
Reserve now that the dollar is a fiat currency not backed by gold.
Commercial banks may lend federal funds to one another on an overnight
basis at the Fed Funds rate, which is the most sensitive indicator of
the direction of interest rates since it is set daily by the market in
response to the Fed's open-market operation: the buying or selling of
government securities to meet Fed Funds rate targets. Thus the real
function of sovereign debt is to provide an instrument through the
buying and selling of which the Fed can inject or withdraw money from
the money supply without appearing to create or destroy money while
actually doing so.
The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 was an important reform measure related
to the operation of the banking system, but it failed to address the
"money trust" problem of private control of money, a public monetary
instrument. The control of the nation's money and credit that had
gradually been taken away from the people over decades since the
founding of the United States became institutionalized through the
creation of the Federal Reserve System and stayed firmly and legally in
the hands of a small circle of supremely powerful elite, depriving the
nation of the financial democracy on which political democracy
ultimately depends. Democracy requires the fair sharing of political
power, which cannot be accomplished without fair sharing of financial
power.
During the presidency of Theodore Roosevelt (1901-09), Aldrich opposed
many of Roosevelt's progressive antitrust reforms against what
Roosevelt called the "malefactor of great wealth", particularly against
government regulation over private railroads built with massive
government subsidy. Although the Aldrich-Rockefeller union combined
power and wealth, the reputations of Nelson Aldrich and John D
Rockefeller Sr were less than stellar. In a series of articles for
Cosmopolitan magazine in 1906, muckraking journalist David Graham
Phillips portrayed Aldrich as a corrupt political boss who contributed
to the "Treason of the Senate". Similarly, writer Ida Tarbell (History
of the Standard Oil) exposed the senior Rockefeller as a ruthless
robber baron. President Roosevelt included Rockefeller among the
"malefactors of great wealth".
Remembering Rockefeller
When Ida Tarbell traveled to Cleveland to observe John D Rockefeller
Sr, the man she had been writing about for two years, she chose not to
confront him face to face. She studied Rockefeller's every move at a
distance, gathering ammunition for a scathing character piece. For his
part, Rockefeller never got back at the feisty reporter. "Let the world
wag" was his favorite motto, and long silence his response to Tarbell's
attacks.
Tarbell wrote that Rockefeller had the powerful imagination to see what
might be done with the oil business if it could be centered in his
hands, the intelligence to analyze the problem into its elements, and
to find the key to control. He had the essential element to all great
achievement, a steadfastness to a purpose once conceived that nothing
can crush. The reporter characterized Rockefeller as "good". There was
no more faithful Baptist in Cleveland than he. Every enterprise of that
church he had supported liberally from his youth. He gave to its poor.
He visited its sick. He wept for its suffering. Moreover, he gave
unostentatiously to many outside charities he deemed worthy. He was
simple and frugal in his habits. He never went to the theater, never
drank wine. He was a devoted husband, and he gave much time to the
training of his children, seeking to develop in them his own habits of
economy and clarity. Yet he was willing to strain every nerve to obtain
for himself special and unethical, if not outright illegal, privileges
from the railroads that were bound to ruin every man in the oil
business not sharing his vision of order. Religious emotion and
sentiments of charity, propriety and self-denial seem to have taken the
place in him of notions of justice and regard for the rights of others.
"It may be that Mr Rockefeller is one of those double natures that
puzzle the psychologist. A man whose soul is built like a ship in
air-tight compartments to use the familiar figure - one devoted to
business, one to religion and charity, one to simple living and one to
nobody knows what. But between these compartments there are no doors,"
wrote Tarbell.
Rockefeller finally responded late in life
This sweetness that she tries to bring
in, referring to these good qualities, and this praise that she brings
in as to ability and perseverance and whatever traits which she
concedes bring success, is simply covering up her wrath and her
jealousy which were all the time present, but which she did not show
all the time and which she thought she could bring out all the better
by weaving this in as silken thread. She makes a pretense of fairness,
of the judicial attitude, and beneath that pretense she slips into her
'history' all sorts of evil and prejudicial stuff, calling it 'the
record of the court', where it is only a statement by a party at
interest, and she hides the other side. She is very adroit and cunning;
but even she has defeated herself. She has over-reached herself, and
anyone who reads her book with care can see that she is dishonest,
prejudiced and untruthful. Poor woman! How she has degraded herself and
failed of accomplishing her object to injure, to smirch, to overthrow
the Standard Oil Company, to satisfy the petty spite against it because
forsooth her father and brother could not compete in the oil business.
I do not remember just how many [refineries] there were [in Cleveland]
- say 25 or 30, more or less. Some of them were very little ... More
than 75, and probably more than 80% - certainly a great number - of the
refiners at Cleveland were already crushed by the competition which had
been steadily increasing up to this time ... They didn't collapse. They
had collapsed before. That's the reason they were so glad to combine
their interest if they so wished it ... [They were] mighty glad to get
somebody to come and find a way out. We were taking all the risks,
putting up our good money. They were putting in their old junk ... When
it was found how much of stock or money would be given in exchange for
their plants we found no difficulty in proceeding rapidly with the
negotiations, and nearly all came in ... though it is true that a few
of the refiners decided to remain out, and these were among the
smallest and least able to compete with us. With these our relations
continued, entirely pleasantly, until at length, one by one, of their
own volition, they were pleased to embrace the opportunity to join
their interests with ours, the result of which in every case was most
satisfactory to them.
From Rockefeller's perspective, what he said to them was: "We here [in
Cleveland] are at a disadvantage. Something should be done for our
mutual protection. We think this is a good scheme. Think it over. We
would be glad to consider it with you if you are so inclined."
Rockefeller acknowledged no compulsion, no pressure, no "crushing".
"How could our company succeed if its members had been forced to join
it and were working under the dash?" he asked rhetorically.
Tarbell reported a different observation.
There were at the time some 26 refineries
in [Cleveland], some of them very large plants. All of them were
feeling more or less the discouraging effects of the last three or four
years of railroad discriminations in favor of the Standard Oil Company.
To the owners [of the 26 refineries] Mr Rockefeller went one by one,
and explained the South Improvement Company. 'You see,' he told them,
'this scheme is bound to work. It means absolute control by us of the
oil business. There is no chance for any one outside. But we are going
to give everybody a chance to come in. You are to turn over your
refinery to my appraisers, and I will give you Standard Oil Company
stock or cash, as you prefer, for the value we put upon it. I advise
you to take the stock. It will be for your good.' ... It was useless to
resist, he told the hesitating: they would certainly be crushed if they
did not accept his offer, and he pointed out in detail, and with
gentleness, how beneficent the scheme really was - preventing the Creek
refiners from destroying Cleveland, keeping up the price of refined
oil, destroying competition, and eliminating speculation.
All over the country the refineries in the same condition as Tack's
firm sold or leased. Those who felt the hard times and had any hope of
weathering them resisted at first. With many of them the resistance was
due simply to their love for their business and their unwillingness to
share its control with outsiders. The thing which a man has begun,
cared for, led to a healthy life, from which he has begun to gather
fruit, which he knows he can make greater and richer, he loves as he
does his life. It is one of the fruits of his life. He is jealous of it
- wishes the honor of it, will not divide it with another. He can
suffer heavily by his own mistakes, learn from them, correct them. He
can fight opposition, bear all - so long as the work is his. There were
refiners in 1875 who loved their business in this way. Why one should
love an oil refinery the outsider may not see; but to the man who had
begun with one still and had seen it grow by his own energy and
intelligence to 10, who now sold 500 barrels a day where he once sold
five, the refinery was the dearest spot on earth save his home. He
walked with pride among its evil-smelling places, watched the processes
with eagerness, experimented with joy and recounted triumphantly every
improvement. To ask such a man to give up his refinery was to ask him
to give up the thing which, after his family, meant most in life to
him.
As Tarbell saw it.
All over the country the refineries [in
distressed conditions] were sold or leased. Those who felt the hard
times and had any hope of weathering them resisted at first. With many
of them the resistance was due simply to their love for their business
and their unwillingness to share its control with outsiders. The thing
which a man has begun, cared for, led to a healthy life, from which he
has begun to gather fruit, which he knows he can make greater and
richer, he loves as he does his life. It is one of the fruits of his
life. He is jealous of it - wishes the honor of it, will not divide it
with another. He can suffer heavily by his own mistakes, learn from
them, correct them. He can fight opposition, bear all - so long as the
work is his.
That was the American spirit, what the constitution refers to a the
right to the pursuit of happiness. There were refiners in 1875 who
loved their business in this way. Why one should love an oil refinery
the outsider may not see; but to the man who had begun with one still
and had seen it grow by his own energy and intelligence to ten, who now
sold 500 barrels a day where he once sold five, the refinery was the
dearest spot on Earth save his home. He walked with pride among its
evil-smelling places, watched the processes with eagerness,
experimented with joy and recounted triumphantly every improvement. To
ask such a man to give up his refinery was to ask him to give up the
thing which, after his family, meant most in life to him ... this
feeling was a weak sentiment. To place love of independent work above
love of profits was as incomprehensible to him as a refusal to accept a
rebate because it was wrong!
Rockefeller agreed.
What a Godsend it was to the many little
inefficient and unsuccessful refiners of Oil Creek that a buyer was
found for them when for years they had been losing money! How wrong for
the "historian" to call it a crime that these men were delivered from
their sinking ships. It was a great mercy and without precedent, as has
been hitherto stated. Almost any other historian, it would seem, would
blush today to read injustice as it is written in these very pages,
where [Tarbell] is made to speak of the crime, which should have been
characterized only as an unprecedented magnanimous deliverance such as
had not hitherto been known in the annals of business! In all times
past the weak man in the competition dropped out and was lost sight of.
These men for years were importuned to join hands with those who were
stronger and ready to pull them out from their embarrassments and fit
them in to be useful in the administration of the Standard Oil Company
so far as they had integrity, intelligence, enterprise and industry to
warrant the expectation that they could be stones in the foundation of
the great structure, the likes of which the world had never seen. [As
for the producers], they were like a lot of foolish children, and would
not be controlled, and would not observe the law referring to supply
and demand. And this was all there was in the problem. How many times
we told them - over and over again! - that if they would restrict
production they would be the gainers. But how impossible it was for
them to grasp that fact, and how impossible it was for them to summon
sufficient integrity to carry out the agreements they made, in order to
keep it. They knew it, but they wanted what certain of the refiners
wanted; that is, to keep their bread and butter and eat it, too. This
was found impossible. These people didn't believe in themselves; they
didn't believe in the Standard Oil Company, they didn't believe in
anybody, away down, and there was a screw loose in a great many of
them, and so the sane ones had a hard problem.
A century later, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) adopts Rockefeller's advice and resorts to production cuts to
keep oil prices up.
It is therefore truly amazing that Abby Aldrich, born to a
super-powerful father and married to a super-rich husband, both of whom
personified the rise of a moneyed aristocracy in the new democratic
nation, brought up in a family culture that firmly believed in the
right of the strong to eliminate the weak, should turn out to be the
liberal, progressive woman that she was.
According to biographer Bernice Kert, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller was "a
buoyant, impulsive, warm-hearted, lovable woman with [a] relaxed,
worldly attitude [that] differed markedly from the rigid Baptist views
of the Rockefellers". Yet she handled her in-laws with aplomb, and her
reserved husband, John D Jr, adored her. It was Abby who humanized shy,
religious John Jr, persuading him to renounce ruthless business in
favor of benevolent philanthropy. While keeping her conservative
husband happy, she pursued her own interests as a pioneering champion
of modern art and folk art. With friends Lillie Bliss and Mary
Sullivan, she helped found the Museum of Modern Art in 1929. She
encouraged a new appreciation of American folk art through her gifts to
Colonial Williamsburg, the 18th-century Virginia town restored with
exacting authenticity. She also played a key role in the creation of
Rockefeller Center in New York City, a superb urban design project
built to create jobs during the Great Depression.
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller used her empathy, willingness to experiment,
and defiant optimism to leaven her husband's conservative thinking. She
expanded his vision of what the Rockefeller fortune could do, shaping
the family into a progressive force in philanthropy, the arts,
education, the social and physical sciences and politics. She supported
such progressive social reforms as the Young Women's Christian
Association (YWCA), National Women's Trade Union League, and American
Birth Control League and was at the center of a remarkable network of
women including the Mexican communist artist Frida Kahlo, wife of
communist painter Diego Rivera and lover of Leon Trotsky; birth-control
activist Margaret Sanger; and landscape architect Beatrix Farrand,
niece of Edith Wharton and wife of Yale historian Max Farrand (The
Fathers of the Constitution). She raised her six children - Babs,
John III, Nelson, Laurence, Winthrop and David - with a commitment to
social justice and public service to a variety of socially beneficial
ends normally alien to super-rich heirs. She exerted strong positive
influence on her five sons. A playful and attentive parent, she
encouraged them to have an interest in the larger world and instilled
in them her open-mindedness. "I want to make an appeal to your sense of
fair play ... to begin your lives by giving the other fellow a fair
chance and a square deal," she wrote in a 1923 letter to John III,
Nelson and Laurence about persistent racism, an issue most white
Americans chose to deny or ignore at the time. "It is to the
everlasting disgrace of the United States that horrible lynchings and
brutal race riots frequently occur in our midst. The social ostracism
of the Jews ... causes cruel injustice ... I long to have our family
stand firmly for what is best and highest in life ... If you older boys
will do it the younger will follow."
A New York Times editorial published on the occasion of her death on
April 5, 1948, at age 73 described her as "the spirit that held [the
Rockefellers] together" but whose role in the handling of the family
wealth was "a fortunate thing for society, for this country, and for
the world". The influence of her liberal viewpoints on her husband and
children is well documented.
Such personalities as Nelson Aldrich, John D Rockefeller and J P
Morgan, all born within a span four years between 1837 and 1841, were
products of a capitalistic age they helped to create. They were
radicals who altered the nature of US society, overthrowing the
agrarian democracy that underpinned the political mandate of the new
nation founded three-quarters of a century earlier. With a view of
themselves as moral, disciplined visionaries of strong Protestant
ethics, they were meticulously upright in their personal affairs while
engaging in wholesale duplicity in large-scale business and financial
manipulation. They were ruthless empire builders in that they did not
merely play the game to win, but they bent the rules of the game to
ensure their less-than-fair winnings. And they were not apologetic
about it.
Rockefeller wrote:
The Standard Oil Co has been one of the
greatest, if not the greatest, of upbuilders we ever had in this
country - or in any country. All of which has inured to the benefit of
the towns and cities the country over; not only in our country but the
world over. And that is a very pleasant reflection now as I look back.
I knew it at the time, though I realize it more keenly now. We had
vision, saw the vast possibilities of the oil industry, stood at the
center of it, and brought our knowledge and imagination and business
experience to bear in a dozen, 20, 30 directions. There was no branch
of the business in which we did not make money ... Here was a force
that reorganized business, and everything else followed it-all
business, even the government itself, which legislated against it.
Tarbell rejected that view.
[John Rockefeller's] importance lies not
so much in the fact that he is the richest individual in the world,
with the control of the property that it entails; it lies in the fact
that his wealth, and the power springing from it, appeal to the most
universal and powerful passion in this country - the passion for money.
John D Rockefeller, measured by our national ambition, is the most
successful man in the world - the man who has got the most of what men
most want ... Mr Rockefeller is a hypocrite. This man has for 40 years
lent all the power of his great ability to perpetuating and elaborating
a system of illegal and unjust discrimination by common carriers. He
has done more than any other person to fasten on this country the most
serious interference with free individual development which it suffers,
an interference which, today, the whole country is struggling vainly to
strike off, which it is doubtful will be cured, so deep-seated and so
subtle is it, except by revolutionary methods. It does not pay. Our
national life is on every side distinctly poorer, uglier, meaner, for
the kind of influence he exercises.
Tarbell, missing the point that it was the system that made the man,
went on to attack the wrong target: "I never had an animus against
Standard Oil's size and wealth, never objected to their corporate form.
I was willing that they should combine and grow as big and rich as they
could, but only by legitimate means. But they had never played fair,
and that ruined their greatness for me."
Tarbell was excusing the system and blamed it on the man, a common
error made by American liberals. The same attitude perseveres on their
reaction to the Enron, WorldCom, Citibank, AIG scandals in recent
years, that it was the few apples rather than the barrel that were
rotten.
Rockefeller, of course, disagreed: "It was the law of nature, the
survival of the fittest, that [the small refiners] could not last
against such a competitor. Undoubtedly ... some of them were very
bitter. But there was no band of greedy men plundering them. An able,
intelligent, far-seeing organization simply outstripped men in the
casual, haphazard way of doing business. That was inevitable."
Yet the purpose of civilization is to improve on the laws of nature.
The fault was in the system, not the persons who excelled in the
barbaric game. These robber barons had a common vision of the need to
create a centrally controlled order out of decentralized democratic
chaos. Above all, they recognized clearly that in a society where
wealth was denominated in money, the way to achieve great wealth was to
control the nature of money. What they did was to stage what amounted
to an autocratic coup d'etat on the United States' monetary regime. On
this most antisocial coup d'etat Tarbell said nothing.
NEXT: A Coup d'etat on the Monetary
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