登陆注册
19412100000005

第5章

This second proposition of the advocates of female suffrage is of a general character. It does not point to particular abuses, it claims the right of woman to vote as one which she should demand, whether practically needed or not. It is asserted that to disqualify half the race from voting is an abuse entirely inconsistent with the first principles of American politics. The answer to this is plain. The elective franchise is not an end; it is only a means. A good government is indeed an inalienable right. Just so far as the elective franchise will conduce to this great end, to that point it becomes also a right, but no farther. A male suffrage wisely free, including all capable of justly appreciating its importance, and honestly discharging its responsibilities, becomes a great advantage to a nation. But universal suffrage, pushed to its extreme limits, including all men, all women, all minors beyond the years of childhood, would inevitably be fraught with evil. There have been limits to the suffrage of the freest nations. Such limits have been found necessary by all past political experience. In this country, at the present hour, there are restrictions upon the suffrage in every State. Those restrictions vary in character. They are either national, relating to color, political, mental, educational, connected with a property qualification, connected with sex, connected with minority of years, or they are moral in their nature.*

[FOOTNOTE by SFC} *In connection with this point of moral qualification we venture to ask a question. Why not enlarge the criminal classes from whom the suffrage is now withheld? Why not exclude every man convicted of any degrading legal crime, even petty larceny? And why not exclude from the suffrage all habitual drunkards judicially so declared? These are changes which would do vastly more of good than admitting women to vote. {END

FOOTNOTE}

This restriction connected with sex is, in fact, but one of many other restrictions, considered more or less necessary even in a democracy.

Manhood suffrage is a very favorite term of the day. But, taken in the plain meaning of those words, such fullness of suffrage has at the present hour no actual existence in any independent nation, or in any extensive province. It does not exist, as we have just seen, even among the men of America. And, owing to the conditions of human life, we may well believe that unrestricted fullness of manhood suffrage never can exist in any great nation for any length of time. In those States of the American Union which approach nearest to a practical manhood suffrage, unnaturalized foreigners, minors, and certain classes of criminals, are excluded from voting.

And why so? What is the cause of this exclusion? Here are men by tens of thousands--men of widely different classes and conditions--peremptorily deprived of a privilege asserted to be a positive inalienable right universal in its application. There is manifestly some reason for this apparently contradictory state of things. We know that reason to be the good of society. It is for the good of society that the suffrage is withheld from those classes of men. A certain fitness for the right use of the suffrage is therefore deemed necessary before granting it. A criminal, an unnaturalized foreigner, a minor, have not that fitness; consequently the suffrage is withheld from them. The worthy use of the vote is, then, a qualification not yet entirely overlooked by our legislators. The State has had, thus far, no scruples in withholding the suffrage even from men, whenever it has believed that the grant would prove injurious to the nation.

Here we have the whole question clearly defined. The good of society is the true object of all human government. To this principle suffrage itself is subordinate. It can never be more than a means looking to the attainment of good government, and not necessarily its corner-stone. Just so far is it wise and right. Move one step beyond that point, and instead of a benefit the suffrage may become a cruel injury. The governing power of our own country--the most free of all great nations--practically proclaims that it has no right to bestow the suffrage wherever its effects are likely to become injurious to the whole nation, by allotting different restrictions to the suffrage in every State of the Union. The right of suffrage is, therefore, most clearly not an absolutely inalienable right universal in its application.

It has its limits. These limits are marked out by plain justice and common-sense. Women have thus far been excluded from the suffrage precisely on the same principles--from the conviction that to grant them this particular privilege would, in different ways, and especially by withdrawing them from higher and more urgent duties, and allotting to them other duties for which they are not so well fitted, become injurious to the nation, and, we add, ultimately injurious to themselves, also, as part of the nation. If it can be proved that this conviction is sound and just, founded on truth, the assumed inalienable right of suffrage, of which we have been hearing so much lately, vanishes into the "baseless fabric of a vision." If the right were indeed inalienable, it should be granted, without regard to consequences, as an act of abstract justice. But, happily for us, none but the very wildest theorists are prepared to take this view of the question of suffrage. The advocates of female suffrage must, therefore, abandon the claim of inalienable right. Such a claim can not logically be maintained for one moment in the face of existing facts. We proceed to the third point.

THIRDLY. THE ELEVATION OF THE ENTIRE SEX, THE GENERAL PURIFICATION OF POLITICS THROUGH THE INFLUENCE OF WOMEN, AND THE CONSEQUENT ADVANCE OF THE WHOLE RACE. Such, we are told, must be the inevitable results of what is called the emancipation of woman, the entire independence of woman through the suffrage.

同类推荐
  • 溪山琴况

    溪山琴况

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 商界现形记

    商界现形记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宝藏天女陀罗尼法

    宝藏天女陀罗尼法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 居官格言

    居官格言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 四教颂

    四教颂

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 腰问

    腰问

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 封锁的心灵

    封锁的心灵

    曾经他们的眼泪滴到地上,衣服上,手上,滴进心里,滴进心中的伤口,变成了珍珠。当他们努力奔向,心中的光明,可是当他们到达光明时,却发现自己已变成黑暗。而眼泪是变成珍珠,还是变成一把利刃?请试目以待!
  • 大侠,别怕

    大侠,别怕

    ——大侠,给我当压寨相公嘛。——你太小了,等你十六岁的时候再来找我吧。——那你叫什么名字呀?——慕容云天。
  • 阴阳神珠

    阴阳神珠

    重生大汉小山村,十年幻想指点江山气吞山河,哪知这世真的有妖真的有仙,村庄被屠,而他成了一妖童,随时可能被吃。
  • 含中集

    含中集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 不灭神承

    不灭神承

    天地裂,众生难,苍穹裂,泯众生,天地大劫,规则秩序混乱,成神无望,谁来拯救天下苍生。
  • 酷龙王子-1摄氏度

    酷龙王子-1摄氏度

    一座世间少有的种植奇异花的花园,看守这座花园的是一位冷峻而帅气的年轻王子。如精灵般的小魔女为了逃避女巫的追杀,不小心误入了这片神圣而秘密的花园……她:一个外表柔弱却满脑子都是赚钱想法的普通女生,在躲避债主追杀时,误打误撞闯入了一个座神秘的花园,而令她无比郁闷的是,这座花园的主人就是前两天她不小心得罪的冷面王子。为了惩罚自己所犯的错误,她不得不留在花园城堡成为他的用人……
  • 笑面神探

    笑面神探

    这是一些故事,这是一个人,这些事离奇诡异,这个人常笑眼吟吟,笑脸下的内心独白就如每个人某一刻所想的是什么?只有一个回答,鬼才知道,每一故事都是一次重生,世间的黑暗是永恒的,光明亦是永恒的,但光明与黑暗却对立而不绝对,光明滋生黑暗,黑暗也永远不会绝缘光明,,,,,,,,
  • 天食:终结的时代

    天食:终结的时代

    四十六亿年前,一颗古老而又巨大的恒星寿命终止,发生巨大的爆炸。恒星爆炸所产生的尘埃飘到某个星系,经历无数年的时间,一颗湛蓝的星球出现。在这有着如梦幻般蓝色的行星上,无数的文明诞生,但又有无数的文明消亡。仿佛有某种东西在暗中控制一般,一切的一切都被无数次终结,什么都没有留下……
  • 邪灵档案

    邪灵档案

    人勾魂,鬼说书,金库藏诡异,床下埋白骨,夜读邪灵档案,从此人鬼不分!我回乡看望病危的爷爷,不知不觉的踏入了一个恐怖的禁区。杀人、养尸、炼蛊、勾魂,一个个神秘而诡异的东西忽然都冒了出来。原以为自己快要接近终点了,可忽然峰回路一转又变成了起点。到那时候我才知道这是个根本没有尽头的局。一张阴阳嘴,说遍两界事儿,敢情御用说书人嘴里的故事都是真的。