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No man is kept poor because opportunity has been taken away from him; because
other people have monopolized the wealth, and have put a fence around it.
You may be shut off from engaging in business in certain lines, but there
are other channels open to you. Probably it would be hard for you to get control
of any of the great railroad systems; that field is pretty well monopolized.
But the electric railway business is still in its infancy, and offers plenty
of scope for enterprise; and it will be but a very few years until traffic
and transportation through the air will become a great industry, and in all
its branches will give employment to hundreds of thousands, and perhaps to
millions, of people. Why not turn your attention to the development of aerial
transportation, instead of competing with J.J. Hill and others for a chance
in the steam railway world?
It is quite true that if you are a workman in the employ of the steel trust
you have very little chance of becoming the owner of the plant in which you
work; but it is also true that if you will commence to act in a Certain Way,
you can soon leave the employ of the steel trust; you can buy a farm of from
ten to forty acres, and engage in business as a producer of foodstuffs. There
is great opportunity at this time for men who will live upon small tracts of
land and cultivate the same intensively; such men will certainly get rich. You
may say that it is impossible for you to get the land, but I am going to prove
to you that it is not impossible, and that you can certainly get a farm if you
will go to work in a Certain Way.
At different periods the tide of opportunity sets in different directions,
according to the needs of the whole, and the particular stage of social evolution
which has been reached. At present, in America, it is setting toward agriculture
and the allied industries and professions. Today, opportunity is open before
the factory worker in his line. It is open before the business man who supplies
the farmer more than before the one who supplies the factory worker; and before
the professional man who waits upon the farmer more than before the one who
serves the working class.
There is abundance of opportunity for the man who will go with the tide, instead
of trying to swim against it.
So the factory workers, either as individuals or as a class, are not deprived
of opportunity. The workers are not being "kept down" by their masters; they
are not being "ground" by the trusts and combinations of capital. As a class,
they are where they are because they do not do things in a Certain Way. If the
workers of America chose to do so, they could follow the example of their brothers
in Belgium and other countries, and establish great department stores and co-operative
industries; they could elect men of their own class to office, and pass laws
favoring the development of such co-operative industries; and in a few years
they could take peaceable possession of the industrial field.
The working class may become the master class whenever they will begin to do
things in a Certain Way; the law of wealth is the same for them as it is for
all others. This they must learn; and they will remain where they are as long
as they continue to do as they do. The individual worker, however, is not held
down by the ignorance or the mental slothfulness of his class; he can follow
the tide of opportunity to riches, and this book will tell him how.
No one is kept in poverty by a shortness in the supply of riches; there is
more than enough for all. A palace as large as the capitol at Washington might
be built for every family on earth from the building material in the United
States alone; and under intensive cultivation, this country would produce wool,
cotton, linen, and silk enough to cloth each person in the world finer than
Solomon was arrayed in all his glory; together with food enough to feed them
all luxuriously.
The visible supply is practically inexhaustible; and the invisible supply really
IS inexhaustible.
Everything you see on earth is made from one original substance, out of
which all things proceed.
New Forms are constantly being made, and older ones are dissolving; but all
are shapes assumed by One Thing.
There is no limit to the supply of Formless Stuff, or Original Substance. The
universe is made out of it; but it was not all used in making the universe.
The spaces in, through, and between the forms of the visible universe are permeated
and filled with the Original Substance; with the formless Stuff; with the raw
material of all things. Ten thousand times as much as has been made might still
be made, and even then we should not have exhausted the supply of universal
raw material.
No man, therefore, is poor because nature is poor, or because there is not
enough to go around.
Nature is an inexhaustible storehouse of riches; the supply will never run
short. Original Substance is alive with creative energy, and is constantly producing
more forms. When the supply of building material is exhausted, more will be
produced; when the soil is exhausted so that food stuffs and materials for clothing
will no longer grow upon it, it will be renewed or more soil will be made. When
all the gold and silver has been dug from the earth, if man is still in such
a stage of social development that he needs gold and silver, more will produced
from the Formless. The Formless Stuff responds to the needs of man; it will
not let him be without any good thing.
This is true of man collectively; the race as a whole is always abundantly
rich, and if individuals are poor, it is because they do not follow the Certain
Way of doing things which makes the individual man rich.
The Formless Stuff is intelligent; it is stuff which thinks. It is alive, and
is always impelled toward more life.
It is the natural and inherent impulse of life to seek to live more; it is
the nature of intelligence to enlarge itself, and of consciousness to seek to
extend its boundaries and find fuller expression. The universe of forms has
been made by Formless Living Substance, throwing itself into form in order to
express itself more fully.
The universe is a great Living Presence, always moving inherently toward more
life and fuller functioning.
Nature is formed for the advancement of life; its impelling motive is the increase
of life. For this cause, everything which can possibly minister to life is bountifully
provided; there can be no lack unless God is to contradict himself and nullify
his own works.
You are not kept poor by lack in the supply of riches; it is a fact which I
shall demonstrate a little farther on that even the resources of the Formless
Supply are at the command of the man or woman will act and think in a Certain
Way.
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