We live in a very strange time, of which the main mark is that things
are being altered and perverted so rapidly that what was the worst abuse
yesterday is a comparatively mild anomaly today...the ignorant
discontent of the rich against things like taxation begins to have a
sort of shadowy excuse, not through any particular change of their own
benighted intellects for the better, but by the extraordinary change in
the science of taxation for the worse. A man who has always regarded
himself as a Coriolanus hardening his heart against the sentimentalism
of the Poor Rates finds himself in his old age a kind of Tribune of the
People against the tyranny of the Insurance Act....Even illiterate
plutocracy can sometimes be right by instinct as compared with more
political monomaniacs and fidgetty prigs...
...our social
reformers to-day have everywhere the same attitude, both rightly and
wrongly. It is marked by a readiness to grant favours or conveniences to
the citizen if he will give up some part of his old independence...
-April 12, 1913, Illustrated London News
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