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Jacob A. Riis 1849–1914. The Battle with the Slum. 1902.

Page 84

  Nor is it going to help us any to charge it all to the tenant “who will herd.” He herds because he has no other chance; because it puts money into some one’s pockets to let him. We never yet have passed a law for his relief that was not attacked in the same or the next legislature in the interest of the tenement-house builder. Commission after commission has pointed out that the tenants are “better than the houses they live in”; that they “respond quickly to improved conditions.” Those are not honest answers. The man who talks that way is a fool, or worse.
  The truth is that if we cannot stop the crowds from coming, we can make homes for those who come, and at a profit on the investment. That has been proved, is being proved now every day. It is not a case of transforming human nature in the tenant, but of reforming it in the landlord builder. It is a plain question of the per cent he is willing to take.
  So then, we have got it on the moral ground where it belongs. Let the capmaker’s case be ever so strong, we shall yet win. We shall win his fight and our own together; they are one. This is the way it stands at the outset of the twentieth century: New York’s housing is still the worst in the world. We have the biggest crowds. We have been killing the home that is our very life at the most reckless