What type of society is necessary to maximize human
thriving? My wife and I had visited a
model planned city, Roebling, N.J. Wikipedia reports:
·
Roebling, site of the Roebling Steel Mill, was
founded by Charles Roebling, son of John A. Roebling. John A. Roebling &
Sons company built and provided the steel for the Brooklyn Bridge, the Golden
Gate Bridge, as well as numerous other bridges including one over Niagara
Falls. The steel mill was also responsible for the production of the elevator
cables for the Empire State Building in New York City, the Chicago Board of
Trade Building in Chicago and the Washington Monument.
At its heyday, it employed 10,000 at the Roebling company
town, where Charles had designed the houses and rented them to his employees.
The fancier houses were designed for upper management. However, even the most
unskilled workers lived in respectable quarters.
Admittedly, the community was somewhat paternalistic. It had
its own police, schools, ball teams, a tavern, and medical care was available.
Roebling even allowed competing stores access and paid their employees in US
dollars, giving them the option of exercising choice. However, the employee had
to sign a contract agreeing that he could be discharged from Roebling for
rowdiness.
The Roeblings admitted that their intention was not to build
the ideal community. Instead, they had merely envisioned a stable and
sustainable community.
We were reminded of another planned community built by
Stalin in 1949 to rival neighboring Krakov, Poland. Nowa Huta, however, was
designed as the “ideal” community, “A workers paradise.” It contained everything
needed to nurture a community where all would live equally as brothers, in
harmony, including a steel mill, which would guarantee employment for all. It
became more productive than any other in Poland.
The walls of the apartments were purposely made thin so that
each family would be able to hear the doings of the neighboring families - no
barriers! Sounds ideal, right? Indoctrinal meetings designed to raise up the
ideal new man and a "workers' paradise."
However, this experiment was far from ideal. This paradise
came crashingly to an end when the workers could only be paid with vodka and
sugar.
In contrast, even during the Depression, Roebling never
forced anyone out of company housing simply because they couldn't pay the rent.
Although Roebling sold their mill and town in the
mid-fifties, most of its residents stayed, including the descendants of the
families of former employees. Each, to whom we talked, spoke well of what their
families had communicated about the Roebling experience.
Why had it been such a positive experience? Not only had the
workers been treated fairly, their various ethnicities and faiths were treated
respectfully. Czechs, Hungarians, and Poles were each allowed to have their own
enclaves, social groups, and churches.
Despite their differences in class, ethnicity, and religion,
it is reported that everyone got along well, each respecting their and even partaking
in their differences.
How could this be? From what we were able to understand from
our visit, it seemed that each community felt safe. The company guaranteed just
standards. There were no reports of favoritism based upon historical
designations between the "oppressed" and the "oppressors."
The only distinctions were based on behavior and job performance, distinctions
that seemingly were accepted.
From all indications, peace prevailed at Roebling. However,
Nowa Huta presented another portrait. Wikipedia reports:
·
During the 1980s, Nowa Huta became a city of
many demonstrations and violent street protests of the Solidarity movement,
fought by the police. At that time, almost 29,000 of the 38,000 workers of the
then Lenin Steelworks belonged to the Solidarity trade union.
It was hardly a paradise, but why not? What went wrong? Communism
did not start out with a correct estimation of humanity and had overestimated
the malleability of human nature, something that all their meetings could not
change.
Whatever we manage, we must first understand. We cannot
manage a business well unless we understand the people who we manage. We need
room for individual initiative and the freedom to grow a garden or to improve
our lodgings without being condemned as bourgeois.
We need the freedom to think what we want, to say what we
want (within generally acceptable limits), and to worship as we please. In
other words, human thriving requires human rights and the rule of a single law
which guarantees the same rights and protections regardless of skin color or
background. These were assurances built into the fabric of the Roebling community.
Roebling wasn’t trying to build a new humanity but a safe place where all felt
equally protected, merely to insure stability and peace, and it is evident that
it succeeded. Each immigrant had their own churches and social groups. Safety
and the feeling that they could trust the community enabled those from various
backgrounds to interact warmly, peacefully, and without fear.
In contrast, the many nations that had lived under communist
dictatorships in Eastern Europe are still governed by fear. The last thing they
want is communism. However, those close to retirement age still vote for
communist politicians who assure them of the retirement benefits that they had
once been promised.
The authorities at Nowa Huta were convinced that they could
micro-manage human affairs. They knew best what others should be thinking,
believing, and saying. In the process, they robbed the workers of their
welfare, initiative, and dignity. Dis-empowering the people, they had
disempowered the economy. Consequently, communism has been an unmitigated flop,
maintained only by oppression and fear.
Roebling didn't last either. However, it gave many a start
to a better life, leaving a legacy of many grateful people. Communism has left
its legacy of a scorched earth and the slaughter of those who resisted their
"paradise."
Communists assure me that they have learned valuable lessons
from their past mistakes. However, it seems that these “lessons” all point to more
strenuous attempts at indoctrination and human engineering, including the
destruction of the traditional family structure, marriage, sexuality, and by
creating lethal divisions according skin color, sexuality, and utterly
destroying any opposition and differences of opinion.
Roebling didn’t need to resort to such extreme measures,
because they weren’t trying to remaster humanity but to work in conjunction
with our needs and nature. Consequently, reason and evidence were their allies.
It seemed that the vast majority accepted the logic that they would reap what
they had sowed.
2 comments:
Amen to that. Liberty, Justice, security, and respect for all. That goes a long way in making life livable and livable.
This logic should appeal to all, but it does not. Their minds have been taken captive by sin:
2 Timothy 2:24–26 And the Lord’s servant must not be quarrelsome but kind to everyone, able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents with gentleness. God may perhaps grant them repentance leading to a knowledge of the truth, and they may come to their senses and escape from the snare of the devil, after being captured by him to do his will.
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