﻿Action of itself is not fast enough: 
Much conjecture is going on among the worlds hystericals—let that pass: hysteria is a poor substitute for reasonable action. 
In our own country the mimic wars going on between the workers unions brings up the old saying: “For they know not what they do.”— 
As a critic I must point out: 
Competition as between these unions for supremacy was OK in theory but things have moved so fast in the recent months that the time-allowance for such worthy objective forbids and will defeat it. Therefor, logic dictates that the workers grab the bull by the horns, join the Industrial Workers of the World and accomplish the thing by instateneous “choice” instead of by years of competition—only to fail or succeed too late. 
Wars in Europe indicates what happens to divided nations—same will happen to warring unions, 
See you in the chain-gang. S’long. 
Things are happening so fast in this blitzkrieg that a French peasant, far from wars turmoils, may retire and wake up to find a Nazi cooking breakfast on his cook stove 
Blitzkrieg? And you can’t get the American worker to act—to say nothing about fast movers… 
Wont it be a surprise when American labor wakes up and finds a stranger juggling around with his electric percolator; his can of Martinson’s—stark empty. Boy, bring the crying towels—for I would weep. 

The Belgian Sir Render has a precedent in the evacuation of Trondheim by the Brittish—only for different reason. In the former the Brittish moved out when the going got tough; in the latter the Belgish king laid down his cards out of pure love for Belgian property and substance—having chosen the wrong side of the argument, the land of his natives was transformed into a battlefield