I shall not attempt to cover the whole trust question in twenty minutes. I shall assume that, whether for economic, political, social or moral reasons, you desire some higher power to interfere with the so-called industrial trusts if effective interference be practicable without doing more harm than good; and that you ask me only to express the views of a lawyer, from a legal standpoint, as to what remedies may be available to the Federal Government, which alone is strong enough to grapple with the situation.
True, some lawyers and statesmen of the first rank still argue that all regulation should be left to the states. But they are generally elderly men, whose views became fixed under conditions that are past. No single state is strong enough now. The Constitution does not allow any group of states to form an alliance among themselves. It does not allow them to compete with each other; and too many of them compete for corporation patronage.
I shall assume that you wish me to confine myself to remedies which are direct in their operation. I shall say nothing about the tariff, or about special railroad privileges. You are the experts best qualified to tell whether the trusts that have built themselves up with the help of these advantages are now strong enough to stand without them.