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Essay(s) by William Cowper Brann
Two Of A Kind
William Cowper Brann
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       BY H. S. C.
       The McKinley administration has been in power long enough to show that the only material distinction between it and the Cleveland administration lies in the fact that it is slightly more extravagant. That is the characteristic of the Republican party and no one is surprised. In addition to being the party of violence, bigotry and fraud, it is also the party of gay liberality with other people's money. In the matter of directing the destinies of this country towards a higher and better national existence, there is really nothing to choose between Republicanism and Democracy. Both are equally unwilling and incompetent, both, despite the prating of civil service snobs and snivellers are dominated by spoils, and the managers of both regard a campaign not as a battle for the betterment of America but as a battle for boodle. The McKinley administration has appointed some Negro postmasters in the South. This the Democratic administration would not have done. The McKinley administration has played openly into the hands of the trust. This the Democratic administration would have done secretly. The McKinley administration enacted a tariff law which robs the people openly for the benefit of a few. This the Democratic administration would have done in sly paragraphs here and there, in the meanwhile declaiming loudly against the unrighteousness of tariff barons. The McKinley administration has based its contracted currency solely upon the gold product. This the Democratic administration would have based, with almost equal fatuity, upon the silver product. McKinleyism and the Democracy with which the country has been cursed on two occasions since the war, are six of one and half a dozen of the other. Practically considered, the main difference between Republicanism and Democracy, is the difference between the highwayman and the sneak thief. This being so, the question naturally arises: What are we going to do about it? Nothing. That is, not yet. The time may come when the people will choose public servants for fitness, and will demand that they keep the pledges made as a condition precedent to election, but it is far from us. In many of the years to come we will continue to build up an office- holding class that is now so utterly idle, incompetent, impudent and corrupt that the history of the world can show nothing like it. This will be always so with universal suffrage. A government which permits the ballot of a man who has not a dollar's interest in the good conduct of the government, who can neither read nor write, who cannot speak the English language, who is permitted to vote merely upon the declaration that he intends at some time to become a citizen, will continue to be a rotten government. The wonder is not that the United States has had war internecine and otherwise, but that it has existed at all. It carries within itself the elements of its own damnation. It has within itself the seeds of decay. Unless they are dug out, that which is now one of the worst governments under the sun will be no government at all.
       [The end]
       William Cowper Brann's essay: Two Of A Kind
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本书目录

"The Christian"
"The Typical American Town"
"There's One Comes After"
Adam And Eve
The Amateur Editor
Apostle vs. Pagan
Are Women Devoid Of Desire?
As I Was Saying
The Author Of Episcopalianism
Balaam's Ass
Behind The Scenes In St. Louis
A Bigoted Archbishop
The Bike Bacillus
Bradley-Martin Bal-Masque
Brann Vs. Baylor
Charity
Christ Comes To Texas
Christian England In India
Coining Blood Into Boodle
Coronation Of The Czar
A Couple Of Unclean Coyotes
The Cow
Dogmatism The Mother Of Doubt
Dolce Far Niente And Dollars
An Episcopalian Mistake
Evidences Of Man's Immortality
Evolution Or Revolution
The Footlight Favorites
The Garden Of The Gods
Garters And Amen Groans
Ginx's Baby
A Gipsy Genius
Glory Of The New Garter
The Goo-Goos And Tammany's Tiger
The Hon. Bardwell Slote, Of Cohosh
Hypnotic Power Of Her
A Kansas City Aristocrat
Life And Death
Looking Backward
Love As An Intoxicant?
Machiavelli
Man's Gust For Gore
Man's Immortality
Marriage And Misery
Monde And Demi Monde
The New South
Nude Art At Chicago
Optimism Vs. Pessimism
A Pictorial Pain Killer
A Pilgrimage To Perdition
Pills And Politics
The Platonic Friendship Fake
Poor Old Texas
Potiphar's Wife
The Professional Reformer
The Public Pedagogue
Puffery Of The Press
Resquiescat In Pace
The Retort Courteous
A Right Royal Roast
Salmagundi [bishop Wilyum Doane]
Salmagundi [Christmas Accidents.--American Custom Of "treating"]
Salmagundi [Mrs. Cleveland]
The Saw-Mill Check System
The Science Of Kissing
The Seven Vials Of Wrath
The Seventh Commandment
Some Economic Idiocy
Some Gold-Bug Guff
Speaking For Myself
Speaking Of Spiritualism
The Stage And Stage Degenerates
A Story Of The Sea
The Sword And The Cross
Talmage The Turgid
Texas Topics
Thomas Carlyle
Throwing Stones At Christ
Tommie Watson's Tommyrot
Trilby And The Trilbyites
Two Of A Kind
An Unprofitable Controversy
Victor Hugo's Immortality
What's The Matter With Missouri?
The Woman Thou Gavest Me
Woman's Wickedness
Working Fashion's Fools