In the depression of 1932, the game of blaming unemployment
on the machines started all over again. Within a few months the doc-
trines of a group calling themselves the Technocrats had spread
through the country like a forest fire. I shall not weary the reader with
a recital of the fantastic figures put forward by this group or with cor-
rections to show what the real facts were. It is enough to say that the
Technocrats returned to the error in all its native purity that machines
permanently displace men—except that, in their ignorance, they pre-
sented this error as a new and revolutionary discovery of their own.
It was simply one more illustration of Santayana’s aphorism that those
who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
The Technocrats were finally laughed out of existence; but their
doctrine, which preceded them, lingers on. It is reflected in hundreds
of make-work rules and feather-bed practices by labor unions; and
these rules and practices are tolerated and even approved because of
the confusion on this point in the public mind.
Testifying on behalf of the United States Department of Justice
before the Temporary National Economic Committee (better known
as the TNEC) in March, 1941, Corwin Edwards cited innumerable
examples of such practices. The electrical union in New York City was
charged with refusal to install electrical equipment made outside of
New York State unless the equipment was disassembled and reassem-
bled at the job site. In Houston, Texas, master plumbers and the
plumbing union agreed that piping prefabricated for installation
would be installed by the union only if the thread were cut off one
end of the pipe and new thread were cut at the job site. Various locals
of the painters’ union imposed restrictions on the use of spray guns,
restrictions in many cases designed merely to make work by requiring
the slower process of applying paint with a brush. A local of the
teamsters’ union required that every truck entering the New York
metropolitan area have a local driver in addition to the driver already
employed. In various cities the electrical union required that if any
temporary light or power was to be used on a construction job there
must be a full-time maintenance electrician, who should not be per-
mitted to do any electrical construction work. This rule, according to
36
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: