|A — Ai -SB e S = a ^ — — :r "^™ rr- = 3D 0^ BE ^ S so rzzr — 7 = — a o m = z 1 o = — 53 ' =33? 3D | 2 s ^ > ! — 2° ^s -< 6 3 ^~ -n j — > 8 m — £2 === —* 1 a ~^™™ — -C Social Evolution of the Argentine Republic By Ernesto Que s a da \ THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC BY HON. ERNESTO QUESADA Attorney-General of the Argentine Republic; Professor in the Universities of Buenos Ayres and La Plata Publication No. 636 American Academy op Political and ^Social Science Reprinted from The Annals, May, 191 1 Price 25 cents This Reprint is made from the May, 1911, volume of THE ANNALS, the complete contents of which are INDIVIDUAL EFFORT IN TRADE EXPANSION. Hon. Elihu Root, United States Senator from New York. THE FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE AMERICAN STATES. Hon. Henry White, Chairman of the American Delegation to the Fourth International Conference of the American States. THE FOURTH PAN-AMERICAN CONFERENCE. Paul S. Reinsch, Delegate to the Fourth Pan-American Con- ference; Professor of Political Science, University of Wis- consin. THE MONROE DOCTRINE AT THE FOURTH PAN-AMERICAN CONFERENCE. Hon. Alejandro Alvarez, Of the Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Santiago, Chile. BANKING IN MEXICO. Hon. Enrique Martinez-Sobral, Chief of the Bureau of Credit and Commerce of the Mexican Ministry of Finance. THE WAY TO ATTAIN AND MAINTAIN MONETARY REFORM IN LATIN-AMERICA. Charles A. Conant, Former Commissioner on the Coinage of the Philippine Islands, New York. CURRENT MISCONCEPTIONS OF TRADE WITH LATIN- AMERICA. Hugh MacNair Kahler, Editor of "How to Export"; Vice- President, Latin-American Chamber of Commerce; Pub- lisher of the Spanish periodicals, "America" and "Inge- nieria." INVESTMENT OF AMERICAN CAPITAL IN LATIN-AMERICAN COUNTRIES. Wilfred H. Schoff, Secretary, Commercial Museum, Philadel- phia. COMMERCE WITH SOUTH AMERICA. PUBLIC INSTRUCTION IN PERU. Albert A. Giesecke, Ph.D., Rector of the University of Cuzco, Cuzco, Peru. THE MONETARY SYSTEM OF CHILE. Dr. Guillermo Subercaseaux, Professor of Political Economy, University of Chile. THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Hon. Ernesto Quesada, Attorney-General of the Argentine Re- public; Professor in the Universities of Buenos Ayres and La Plata. COMMERCIAL RELATIONS OF CHILE. Hon. Henry L. Janes, Division of Latin-American Affairs, De- partment of State, Washington. CLOSER COMMERCIAL RELATIONS WITH LATIN-AMERICA. Bernard N. Baker, Baltimore, Md. IMMIGRATION— A CENTRAL AMERICAN PROBLEM. Ernst B. Filsinger, Consul of Costa Rica and Ecuador, St Louis, Mo. Price $1.50 bound in cloth; $1.00 bound in paper. Postage free. O a. ^ THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC 1 By The Hon. Ernesto Quesada, Attorney-General of the Argentine Republic; Professor in the Universities of Buenos Ayres and La Plata. To condense into a few pages several centuries of the history of a nation like the Argentine Republic, to give some idea of the nature of the forces that have determined the development of this country from the end of the sixteenth century, the .period of its discovery, to this the second decade of the twentieth, when it is celebrating the first centennial of its independence, -is a task at once delicate and arduous. For, aside from these natural difficulties, it will be necessary to avoid all details, to shun statistics, and even to lay aside historical evidence, in order to crystallize into seemingly dogmatic statements, the complicated social evolution of a people in process of transformation, a people still in a formative period. It is a venture bordering upon the impossible. A century after the commencement of the conquest of the Amer- ican continent and after the scattering over the land of the invading race, at once warlike and religious, an expedition which was purely Andalusian discovered the River Plate in the southern extremity of the continent. Instead of penetrating to the south, the expedition fixed its gaze northward, searching for a route by which to renew relations with the rich district of the old empire of the Incas. This was in obedience to that thirst after wealth which characterized the taking possession of America. Two centuries later, these remote provinces had been converted into the very important viceroyship of the River Plate. In one direction it extended from the tropical viceroyship of Peru and the torrid lands of Portuguese Brazil, to Cape Horn, lashed by the raging Antarctic seas, and in the otber direction it stretched from the chain of the Andes, which runs like •lid wall the length <>f one of its flanks, to the Atlantic ' >cean, 'The Arfldftny wlahes to rxpros* its appreciation t" Layton D. Register, Bteq., r.f the I. «w Department <r Pennsylvania, and t.> Mr. Bnrlque on. of tii.- National University of La Plata, <c river districts have been the combined work of these three progressive elements. Immigration has helped immensely toward this same end, but the settlement of (723) 146 The Annals of the American Academy new lands does not advance by leaps and bounds, but spreads gradually. Starting from the port of arrival, the stream of immigration continues to spread clinging closely to the land and little by little it mixes with the existing population, inter-breeds with it, fuses with it, and gives a great surging impulse to agriculture, industry and commerce. The social transformation of the river provinces is due to this junction of the two currents as a result of which the gaucho of the metropolis of Santa Fe or of Entre Rios, who, formerly famous for his bold and lawless tendencies, has to-day been so fused with the different foreign elements that all but the memory of this ancient type has disappeared, and the country is covered over with populous settlements, laborious, prosperous and progressive. The great fertility of the soil has returned with interest the foreign capital which first watered it, and has enriched marvelously all who have engaged in its cultivation. The development of the national recources, in turn, has given birth to such conservative interests that it is incomprehensible to the new generation that the former genera- tion could, at the signal of a semi-barbarous chief jump on their horses and, rushing over the fields, kill, pillage and destroy. It is true that the transition has been effected at the cost of producing a certain political indifference in the new generations, which no doubt, will be overcome in time. The social evolution of the Argentine Republic has finally found its true channel and to-day is in full course of development. In proportion as the foreign immigration continues bringing there- with its happy complement of foreign capital, the country will continue to develop industrially. The astonishing increase in industries, with a total production out of all proportion to the growing population, is only explained by the use on a large scale of the most advanced machinery. But such a metamorphosis spreads from the river districts toward the interior of the country. It does not jump from one point to another without connecting links between them, but always preserves a channel through which a relation is maintained between the different zones already trans- formed or in process of transformation. The first effect of each infusion of foreign blood into creole veins is to appease the hot political passions of other times, abolish the old institution of the local chieftainship, even blot him from memory and replace it (724) The Social Evolution of the Argentine Republic 147 by an absorption in our growing material interests. These material interests appear to have conspired to bring about that indifference towards the state, as such, which makes men look mistakenly at a political career as a profession which thrives off the real working classes. For, our government both municipal, provincial and national appears to be the heritage of a well-defined minority — the politicians — who devote themselves to politics just as other social classes devote themselves to agriculture, stock raising, industry, commerce, etc. Public life with its complex machinery of elections and governing bodies has been, so to say, delivered into the hands of a small group of men who at present are not productive of anything new in the general social situation of former times; that is to say, these men form a definite class, moved by the influence of this or that personality. Though it has suppressed the bloody char- acteristics of the previous period it has not relapsed into their heresies. Little by little this shadow of the old system changes into that of the "boss" of the settlement and ward. The boss makes his business that of the mass of the voters, he stirs them up from their indifference, makes them go to the polls, deliberately falsifies public opinion, and so wins for himself a political managership, which gives him a marked influence in the back offices of officials and in the lobbies of legislatures. From such methods there spring no little censurable legislation of privilege and a great loss of contentment on the part of the people. When public spirit strengthens and shakes from itself the dust of inertia, and when the laboring classes have passed beyond that first stage of money grabbing, all the inhabitants of the nation will commence to busy themselves about the common weal. The thorn of the "boss" will prick them and they will tben be able to form into political parties with unselfish programs and platforms. Every voter will cast his ballot to send to the legislature candidates who uphold the principles of his particular platform. As yet the people have not even reached the gateway to this goal. The past is still seen in full process of evolution and it is not easy to foresee the end. This docs not mean that the present moment of transition is valueless. On the contrary, it is of very great importance, because the social situation in the Argentine Republic is in process of making. (725) 148 The Annals of the American Academy The politicians, now that they look upon themselves as called to stand forth above the heads of the rest of the people, have to be real statesmen. In this historic period, such statesmen, have the personality of the chauffeur who directs one of those swift engines of our century upon its dizzy course, the mechanism of which is so sensitive to the controlling pressure of the hand that it can deftly avoid all accident or cause a catastrophe of fatal con- sequences. There is required in such a man extraordinary coolness, clearness of vision as to responsibility, perfect knowledge of the course to be run, besides ceaseless vigilance, iron nerve when the time of trial arrives and a complete concentration upon the task. The legitimate tasks of government, in this very grave period of Argentine evolution, require a special training on the part of public leaders. They must study thoroughly the problems of our social evolution, and they must form a clear idea of the necessary solutions. Towards this they must steer with undiverted eye. The necessity of further exploitation of our national resources, the successive expansion of enterprise over zone after zone of our territory, the assimilation of the foreign immigrants by the Creole population, the slow formation of a national spirit in the new generation, all these monopolize for the present the national energies and prevent them from turning to other problems. The country is converted, as it were, into a giant boa constrictor. It is entirely given over to the task of converting its food into nourishment, of abstracting the juices from the hard and resisting substances, of passing a multitude of different elements through its living organs so that they may later form a new tissue, adapted to the present and future needs of the country. From this point of view the present moment in the evolution of Argentine is of immense sociological interest. We are permitted to be present at the visible transmutation of a society, too weak even to direct itself, and absorbed in the fusion of different influences. The direction of this process has been handed over without counter- check to public men who are obliged to dictate and put into practice legislation and administrative rules of every kind, as though they enjoyed absolute power. Furthermore, by the very nature of things, the administrative functions in such periods have to discount the future and effect in the present a series of public works or social regulations which will weigh upon future generations not only (726) The Social Evolution of the Argentine Republic 149 from the point of view of the general finances but even from the point of view of national character. The national transformation of the land with ports, canals, railroads, telegraphs and every sort of means of communication, indeed, with every kind of public work, cannot be accomplished with present resources. A call must be made upon those of the future, by means of loans which will be a burden upon coming generations. If such a governmental policy is not accompanied by a skillful and prudent financial manage- ment, the burdens of our descendants will be considerably increased. They may even be committed to a policy that will cause eventual bankruptcy and an inevitable retrogression in the national develop- ment. The intellectual metamorphosis of the nation by a proper system of primary, secondary and higher education and by special schools of technical training, in order to form the national spirit of the future type of Argentine citizen, is certainly our most difficult governmental problem, because it is a question of molding the very soul of the nation. To teach different and contradictory systems, to do and then undo, each day changing the courses of study to successively adopt antagonistic standards and show a real lack of fixity in pedagogic methods, is to commit the greatest of all crimes, because it is not a crime against the exchequer of posterity but against its very soul. To accomplish a fusion of the currents of foreign immigration, to sort out the best from them, and to direct the formation of the new type which is being evolved, melting it in the crucible of the school, of the army, and of public life, is perhaps, to-day our task of transcendent difficulty. Such a problem is greater than that of directing the stream of foreign capital which, while fructifying the national soil, clings to it like the count- less tentacles of a gigantic octopus and absorbs a great part — some- times too great a part — of the riches produced only to transmit them through the arteries of the Republic, to foreign nations who employ it to their exclusive profit. Perhaps no moment in the history of our nation requires a greater combination of qualifications in its public men. The student may contemplate this most interesting transformation, displayed before his eyes like the moving film of a gigantic cinematograph which permits him to grasp at once the different phases of the social problem which it presents. Rarelv in the history of humanity has it been possible to contemplate a like spectacle. The United States (7V) 150 The Annals of the American Academy presented it a half century ago, to the astonished gaze of men of that day who were but little familiar with social problems. The Argentine Republic is repeating now the same phenomenon, with this difference that it can observe itself and be guided by the experience acquired elsewhere. Other countries of the world, in the future will, no doubt, in their turn repeat a similar evolution, though perhaps in a different environment. But the interesting part of the present moment is that the Argentine Republic is sailing upon the same course in the twentieth century that the United States did in the nineteenth. Our evolution is proceeding with greater care because it is being worked out amid better conditions. We can now take advantage of the costly experience gained by our brothers pf the north and so by avoiding many of their errors, seek to escape the shoals upon which they stranded and the mistakes which they involuntarily committed, even though we have in our turn special problems which they did not have. Thus the tremendous politico- social crisis of the North American War of Secession will not be repeated in the southern hemisphere and the Argentine social evolution will not have to solve the profound anthropological problem of the rivalry of races, which, in the United States, arises from the white, black and yellow races, living together side by side. In Argentine there are no ethnic problems. The social antagonism raised by an arrogant plutocracy on the one hand and povery stricken proletariat on the other, is not presented as an Argentine problem, because riches are still in process of formation there, and easily pass from one hand to another. A monopoly of riches cannot be prolonged beyond a single generation because with the system of compulsory divison of descendants' estates, it soon returns to the common mass of the population. Social conditions in our evolution, present distinct problems from those which char- acterize other nations and demand, therefore, a direct study on the ground and must not be viewed through the doctrines developed in other nations and amid other conditions. The molding of the national spirit by uniform and compulsory schools and the slow adaptation of the mass of the immigrants to historical traditions and to future national aims, demand much time and they are now in the full process of being worked out. The celebration of the Cen- tenary of our independence has made prominent the fact that such an evolution is much more advanced than one would think. There still (728) The Social Evolution of the Argentine Republic 151 remains, nevertheless, not a little to be done in this direction, though the national compulsory school system and the army conscription are factors of great importance which are working for fusion. But, in the country districts and in those places where the error has been committed of permitting the formation of settlements, homogeneous in race and religion, which regard themselves as autonomous off- shoots of their mother country, resisting the Argentine school or any intermingling with the mass of neighboring population — in such districts, the fusion, though inevitable, will be necessarily slower. All these sociological problems might and should have been exhaustively studied in the history of the United States during the nineteenth century, a history which, as I have said, the Argentine Republic is repeating in the twentieth. Foreign immigration at this time has no outlet more profitable than the River Plate. The doors of North America are gradually being closed, and the other regions do not yet present the same advantages as those offered by our country. The same thing that happens with the excess of population of other nations also occurs with its surplus capital ; no other quarter of the globe offers better prospects for the investment of capital and for a greater rate of return. The "manifest destiny" of Argentine depends for the present entirely upon the development of its commercial relations with the rest of the world. It must convert itself into the granary and the meat market of Europe. The closest bonds of mutual interest unite Argentina with Europe, because being producers of unlike commodities, the European markets consume our exportation and our markets con- sume theirs. With the rest of America our interchange of trade must be upon a smaller scale, because for more than a century to come we shall be countries producing similar commodities. There- fore, our respective markets will not reciprocally serve to buy the excess of production, but only that which by reason of climate or industrial development is to be found or manufactured in any other country than our own. This has happened to us notably in the case of the United States with its tremendous industrial expansion. In order to fulfill this "manifest destiny," we need pax nutlta with the whole world. We need to give attention exclusively to our development withoul intermeddling in that of others. In this is summed up everything. Hence our intor- (729) 152 The Annals of the American Academy national policy has to be pacific and neutral ; we must be every man's friend, and shun imperialistic fancies. The "splendid isolation" of England fits her condition and her inclination. We must work and we must be allowed to work. Our social evolution still requires a century to acquire a definite contour. Though results may be foreseen from their beginnings, it is not possible to foretell what will be the future Argentine type, physically, mentally or materially. For the present, the only proper thing for us to do is to devote ourselves exclusively to the exploitation of our resources for we have seen how much effort will be required to assimulate our population, to form a national spirit, to build up a great future nation, to develop an administration which shall be a model ot honesty and scientific preparation, and to adapt the republic to its future needs by public works and institutions, and by showing ourselves firm in faith and effective in works. The present social tendencies in Argentine evolution give promise of a great future for the country. The nation is not hesitating or vacillating before the realization of its manifest destiny. It follows with profound interest the new and colossal social experiment, which is unfolding to the view of the world the different phases of the formation of a nation in whose development the shoals are being avoided where others were wrecked, and which is putting into practice the improvements sug- gested by the experience of the other nations in order to realize the new evolution easily, prudently, and successfully. (73o) SPECIAL VOLUMES The United States as a World Power The United States and Latin America The Government in its Relation to Industry American Colonial Policy and Administration Foreign Policy of the United States— Political and Commercial Federal Regulation of Corporations Federal Regulation of Industry Administration of Justice in the United States Corporations and Public Welfare Tariff Problems — American and British Tariffs, Reciprocity and Foreign Trade Tariff Revision Railway and Traffic Problems Electric Railway Transportation Child Labor, Vols. 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