The
Weaving Machine
i
Mr. Joseph Franklin invented a machine that could
weave cloth. It wove faster and straighter
than anyone could weave by hand. He decided to take it to two cities on a
peninsula, Netherton
and Wilton.
In these cities, a large
proportion of the people worked in weaving. Joseph felt
sure he could sell his machine there.
Joseph first took his machine to the mayor of Netherton. “Think of the money you will
earn from this machine!” Joseph said to him.
But the mayor was a
benevolent man. He knew about the people’s
dependence on weaving
for their livelihood. If he bought the machine, the people would lose their jobs. So he refused
to buy it.
Joseph said, “We are no longer in the
medieval age! Soon
everything will be made by
machines. Cloth made by hand will soon be
obsolete. If you don’t change your
archaic ways,
your town’s income will
diminish!”
But the
mayor said, “I don’t like
capitalism. Don’t
impose your
radical ideas on my town.
Go away!”
So Joseph took his machine to the mayor at Wilton. This mayorthought Joseph’s machine
was
spectacular and spent a long time looking at its different
components made of
brass.
The mayor couldn’t
refute the fact that the machine had
drawbacks that would affect the
people’s jobs. But he realized the
machine could bring money and prestige. So he ordered
Joseph to build twenty of them.
Within a year, Wilton was a wealthy city, famous for its wonderful cloth. People no longer
wove but worked in
managerial jobs at cloth factories instead. Nobody bought the cloth from
Netherton anymore. The people of Netherton became poor and hungry.
Finally, the mayor of Netherton called Joseph and said, “Now I
realize that your machine is not just a
passing fad. To succeed
in business, we must be willing to change.”
He then ordered
twenty weaving machines.
After that, both Netherton and Wilton became rich cities,
famous throughout the land for their wonderful cloth.