Loking Backward Chapters 15-22 Flashcards
Leete explains that the government does not regulate the production of art. An author simply has to pay for
first printing of his book. The government then places the book on sale at a price determined by the author.
The author’s work hours are reduced according to the amount his work earns in royalties. Therefore, people with literary talent can devote themselves entirely to
writing, but no one is prevented from trying his or her hand at it. It is much the same with other creative endeavors.
If a group of people wants to publish a magazine or newspaper, they gather enough annual subscriptions to cover the cost of printing it. The subscribers elect an
editor, who is then released from other service for the duration of his term.
The subscribers, who pay for the editor’s maintenance, periodically choose to re-elect or oust the editor. Contributors are compensated from the publication’s general credit, and their hours of labor are reduced accordingly. If a man cannot be freed from the nation’s service through artistic or literary means,
, he can retire at age thirty-three, but he will receive only one-half of the yearly credit of other citizens.
The nation can accurately calculate the expected demand for any good or service because it is the sole producer and distributor. Even goods with very small markets are produced, as long as
consumers are willing to pay the price for them
Citizens can also petition the nation to produce goods that are not already in production. The price of any product is determined by
the value of the labor needed to produce it.
The leaders of trade guilds, workers who have the rank of “general” in the industrial army, are elected by
retired members of the guild. Guilds for the same trade are further organized into “departments,” headed by “lieutenant generals” elected by retired workers for the same trade
The President of the nation is elected from among retired lieutenant generals by the members of the “liberal professions”–doctors, teachers, artists, and so on–not by the industrial army. The President serves
five years, and if Congress is pleased with him, he is then elected to serve the nation on the international council for five more years.
The abolishment of private capital has removed most of the incentives for crime. Because everyone is .
equal with regard to possessions, neither poverty nor luxury can tempt individuals to commit crimes for material gain. All citizens are now well-educated, so violent crimes, unrelated to material gain, are also nearly non-existent.
Those arrested for crimes usually plead guilty because lying is
so strongly discouraged in modern society. If an alleged criminal pleads not guilty, two judges argue, one for each side of the case, and a third judge delivers the verdict.
The President appoints judges from the pool of retired citizens, and the judges elect the members of the Supreme Court. There is no longer any need for special training to understand law, as the law
has been greatly simplified. There are no longer any state governments, and there is very little legislation passed by Congress.
Education, devoted to furthering physical and intellectual development, is free and compulsory until a citizen reaches
twenty-one years of age. The greater efficiency of well-educated workers makes such education cost-effective. Moreover, an education makes a citizen’s company more agreeable and interesting to his neighbors.
The nation is capable of providing a high standard of living to all its citizens, because it has greatly reduced the waste involved in an economy run on private capital. The nation has no military forces or tax collection department to maintain. The criminal justice system is much simpler and smaller because
there are far fewer predatory criminals.
There are far fewer sick and disabled, and there is no need for the financial institutions required to regulate and distribute money. Because washing and cooking are now performed by the nation’s workers rather that by individuals themselves,
, a great deal of time and labor is saved.
Because the nation is the only distributor of goods, a good deal of waste related to
competing distributors is eliminated. Production is firmly pinned to demand, so there are no periodic business crises in which large portions of the labor force are idle