Invested wealth in large holdings controls the country's industrial system, directly by ownership of the plant, as in the mechanical industries, or indirectly through the market, as in farming. So that the population of these civilized countries now falls into two main classes: those who own wealth invested in large holdings and who thereby control the conditions of life for the rest; and those who do not own wealth in sufficiently large holdings, and whose conditions of life are therefore controlled by these others. It is a division, not between those who have something and those who have nothing — as many socialists would be inclined to describe it — but between those who own wealth enough to make it count, and those who do not.


The Vested Interests and the Common Man (1919)


Invested wealth in large holdings controls the country's industrial system, directly by ownership of the plant, as in the mechanical industries, or...

Invested wealth in large holdings controls the country's industrial system, directly by ownership of the plant, as in the mechanical industries, or...