Bengough's Primer: Lessons 25 to
36
Lessons 1-12 |
Lessons 13-24 | Lessons 25-36 | Lessons 37-48 | Lessons 49-60 | Lessons 61-70
LESSON XXV
— Coats For Boots ... Fair Square Trade ... Both
Make Gain |
See the Man with the Coat.
Did he make the Coat?
Yes, he did. It is his Forte to make Coats. And
see the Man with the Boots. He made the Boots, and he
gives all his Time to that Line of work.
What do the Men mean to do now?
They have come to Trade. The Coat Man wants Boots,
and the Boot Man wants a Coat, so when they Trade
their Goods both will Gain by it. They give Goods for
Goods or Work for Work. And then they go and make
like Trade with the Men who make Bread, and Hats, and
Shirts, and Stoves, and all things else that they
Need. But they do not Have to do it just in this Way.
They sell their Boots and Coats for Coin of the
State, and with this Coin they buy what they Need.
But, of course, the Coin stands for Work that has
been done.
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Woodcut: Two thin well-dressed men with their
neighboring shops behind them. One is a tailor, and he
holds out to the other a coat. The second is a cobbler,
and he holds out to the tailor a pair of boots. |
labor
capital
wages
interest
fruits of one's
labor
he who
produces
land
land
monopoly
ownership
in
one's sleep
all
benefits...
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LESSON XXVI — Land
Lord Gets ... Coats And Boots ... But Gives
Nought
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Here we have the same two Men once more. And a Fat
Man is with them. Each gives him Goods. One gives him
a Coat, which he has Made, and one gives him a Pair
of Boots.
This is a fair Trade, too, is it Not? Does the Fat
man give Goods?
No, I do not see that he Does. He holds no goods
in his Hands. He has them spread as if to Get and not
to Give.
Then why do the Men give him their Goods?
Ah! he gives them Coin, that is it?
No, he does Not. He has not Paid them a Cent for
these Things.
Then I give it up.
It is quite plain, my Child. He owns the Land, and
he just gives them Leave to make Coats and Boots on
it. That is all he gives.
Is he not Good? He owns a Lot in the Town on which
they have their Shops.
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Woodcut: the same two men, but this time, between
the tailor and the cobbler is a large man who is taking
the coat from one and the boots from the other. |
trade
land
rent
theft
injustice
unearned
increment
deadweight
loss
landlord
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LESSON XXVII
— Man Owns Spring ... Folks Want Drink
... Have To Pay
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But if that Fat Man owns the Land, should we not
Praise him that he lets the Men who make Coats and
Shoes live on it, so they may Work, and should they
not be Glad to Pay him for its Use?
Yes, they should, If he does "Own" it. But that is
the Point. The Law lets him Own it, but did God mean
Land to be so dealt with? See the Cut up at the top
of this Page. Is it not the Same sort of Thing? Here
is a Man who owns a Pool in the wide, hot Plain, and
he has a barb wire Fence round it. The poor Folks are
Dry and Faint with their Long March, and come to the
Pool to Drink. They must Drink or Die. But he will
not let them Drink if they do not give him a great
Share of the Goods they have brought so far, or a lot
of Gold. Is he not just like the man who owns Land so
as to live on Rent?
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Woodcut: In the background are two pyramids. On the
right are a laden camel and two men, both on their
knees in a praying position. On the left is a man with
exotic looking clothes. Behind him is a small fenced
area bearing a sign: "Water $15 per Gallon." |
air-land-water
ownership
justice
rent
theft
foresight
enclosure
privatization
"Thou Shalt Not Steal."
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LESSON XXVIII
— Want The Earth ... You May Own ... It
By Law
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Here is the World. It is a big Ball, is it
not?
Yes, it is Big. Do you Want the Earth?
Yes, but may I Have it?
So far as the Law goes, Yes, you May. The Law, you
know, lets you "Own" a Lot. If you may thus own One
Lot, you may own Two, and if Two then Ten, and the
Law Draws no Line to Say where the Thing must End.
You may Own the whole Globe, So far as the Law goes.
And Oh, what a heap of Rent you could get if you did
own it! All Men would have to Pay you or Get Off your
Land. They would have no Right to Live but by your
Will, though God gave them the Right to Life. We want
to Mend this Law, so that no Man shall Own Land who
does not Pay each Year its Fair Worth as bare Land to
the Till of the State.
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Woodcut: A well-dressed fat man, standing on the
top portion of a globe. On either side of him are
signs: "Lots to Rent" and "Trespassers will be
Prosecuted According to Law." |
ownership
rent
land
includes
land
excludes
land
different from capital
slavery
freedom
liberty
justice
|
LESSON XXIX
— God Made Land ... Man Must Use ...
Not For Spec.
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If a Man may not Own Land, how is he to Live,
since all he Needs for his Life is got out of Land
?
A Man does not Need to Own Land; it will Serve all
his Ends quite well if he may have the safe Use of
Land, and be left in Peace with no Fear that any
shall come to Turn him Off. To Own Land and to Use
Land are by no means the same Thing. Do you see the
Dog in the Cut? Well, he Owns the Hay, to make Gain
out of it. And the Ox wants to Use the Hay. Now, just
as Hay was Meant to be Used by Oxen and not to be
Held by Dogs, so Land was made to be Used by Men and
not Held by Drones. Now, if the Rent of the Land is
put in the State Till, then no one would Hold Land
who did not mean to Use it. There would be no Spec.
in it as there is now
|
Woodcut: a dark scene, in a stable. On the left is
an ox, labeled "Labor." On the right is a manger, and
in it, a menacing dog whose flank is labeled
"Speculator." |
labor
speculation
ownership
possession
usufruct
dog
in the manger
incentive
taxation
underused
land
hole in the
ground
highest and best
use
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LESSON XXX
— Not The Land ... But Its Worth ...
Would We Tax
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Do you see this Man? He does not Look as if he
were Rich, does he? And you can see that he Works
hard. Yet this Man owns a big piece of Land. He owns
a Farm; a great, wide Farm. And now look at the Man
with the Plug Hat. You can see he is a Rich Man by
his Style, and his Hands are Soft and White. He does
no Work to Speak of. Yet the Land he owns is but a
Small Lot. Now, does it Look as though to own Land
was the sure Way to get Rich?
Ah, I see your Point. It is not the Land that
Tells the Tale, but the Worth of the Land -- its
Worth in Rent each Year. The Town Lot which the Rich
Man owns is Small but its Rent each year is Ten Times
that of the Big Farm. It is the Rent that we would
Tax, not the Space, and this Town Man would pay Ten
Times more than the Farm Man.
|
Woodcut: In the background, a couple of piles of
hay. On the left, a farmer with a pitchfork in hand. On
the right, a fat man in a tophat, looking off in
another direction, puffing on a cigar, arms folded,
waiting. |
land
value,
land
price,
ownership,
urban land
value relative to rural,
land value
taxation,
location,
location, location
|
LESSON XXXI — How Would Plan ... Of One
Tax ... Help Farm Man
|
Here is the Man who Works that Farm. He comes to
us and says, "Yes, I am Poor; I can but make Ends
meet these Days if my Health is good and my Crops
fair. Now, how would this One-tax plan of a Tax on
Land Rent help me?"
We will Tell him. It would help You this way: the
Tax on your Farm would not be High, for the Rent of
your Land each Year is not a great Sum. You pay that
out of what you Earn, and then you keep the Rest. The
Tax on your Barn, House, and so on, is Gone. Store
goods would be Low, for there would be Free Trade,
and you could Sell your Grain for at least as Good a
Price as you now get. The Tax weight would fall on
the Town Lots which are of High Worth, where it Ought
to fall. You would Gain in this, that you would be
Free of much Tax weight you now Bear.
|
Woodcut: the same farmer in the middle of a field.
Shocks of corn or piles of hay in the background. A
hayrake on the ground in the foreground. The farmer is
bent over, carrying on his back five large white bales
each labeled "Tax." |
lvt and
agriculture
urban land
value relative to rural
untaxing
buildings
trade
|
LESSON XXXII
— Help Toil Much ... And His Friend ...
Squelch Land Lord
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Here we have Three Men, and one of them is Hurt.
He is, in fact, Laid out Flat, for a big Stone is on
him.
Yes, it fell on Him and he is No More. You see his
Name on his Hat. That is how the One Tax would Work.
It would Squelch the Man who just Lives on Land Rent.
But it would not Hurt the two Men who now Dance with
Glee, as you see. Their Names are on them, too. They
Hold land but to Use it, and when they Pay the State
for its Use, they Keep all they Earn; no part of it
has to go for a Tax of any Sort. What they make is
their Own; but the Land is the State's, and it is
Right they should Pay for its Use. Do not cry for the
Man that is Down. The Man who Just Lives on Rent is
of no more use to the World than the Flea or Bed
Bug.
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woodcut: two dancing figures, next to a huge rock,
from under which a human face and two hands stick out.
The man on the left is labled "Labor," the one on the
right "Capital." The rock is labeled "Single Tax on
Land Values," and the figure under the rock has lost
his hat, which bears the label "Landlord." |
landlord
labor
capital
untaxing
capital
untaxing
labor
|
LESSON XXXIII
— Three In One ... This Tax Plan ...
Would Help Two
|
But what Man is this?
This is the Plain Man we meet Day by Day, like You
or Me. He Works with Head or Hand, and so he is a
La-bor-er; he has put Cash in some Line of Trade, and
so we Call him a Cap-i-tal-ist; and he Holds Land as
well, and thus is a Land Lord. Thus you see he is a
Three-in-one Man.
Most of us in this Day are such, and so it is Well
to Know that the One Tax on Land Rent would Help and
Aid us in Two of our Three Parts, much more than it
would Hurt us in the Third. It would be a great Good
to All who Work with their Hands, Heads, or Means,
for it would let them Keep all they Earn, which they
may Not do as the Law now is, but it would be Sure
Death to the Man who does No Work, but just Lives on
the Toil of those who do.
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Woodcut: A man with three faces. The one facing to
our left is looking at a document that says "Labor with
Hand or Head" and "Capital invested in some line of
business" and the one facing to our right is looking at
a document saying "Landlord owning land for use or
speculation." |
labor
capital
land
fruits of one's
labor
theft
property
rights
rentier
|
LESSON XXXIV
— Cop With Club ... Steals For State
... Tax On Goods
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See the Cop with the Club! What is he at?
He is at his right Work.
What! Is it, then, his Work to Rob this Man of the
Bread he has made?
A Part of it — Yes. The Man who makes Bread
has to give up some Loaves each year to the State in
the shape of Tax, just as the Man who makes Shoes,
and he who makes Coats, and so on, have each got to
Give Up some of the Things they have Made. The Cop
stands for the Law that takes these Goods.
But why does the Cop have to do so?
For this cause: As you see in the Cut, the Land
Lord has Gone Off with the Fund from Land Rent which
would have been all the State needs; and now the Law
must send the Cop to Rob in this Way to make up for
the Loss of the Fund. Is it not a Queer way to
do?
|
Woodcut: Three figures: A police officer with his
hand on the neck of a baker selling breadloafs from a
basket. In the background, another man is making off
with a huge bag labeled "$ Land Value" |
theft
justice
he who
produces
landlord
|
LESSON XXXV — Load
Poor Toil ... Make Up Fund ... Land Lord
Takes
|
Who is this Man with the great Load on his
Back?
That is Toil. This means that the Plan of the
State now is to put the Tax Load on those who Work,
and the Things they make by their Work. Some of this
Tax is Straight, and you See and Know how much it is;
and Some of it is Put On in a Shape that you can not
well See and Count.
But why does the State pile the Tax on Toil when
there is a Fund which Springs out of the Land?
See, it goes in to the Fat Man's Hat, though he
does not Work. Is not this what God meant as a Fund
to help the State?
It is, but Man is so Wise, he thinks he Knows more
than God, so he lets that Fund go to the Man who Owns
the Earth, and in its Stead he Piles the Tax on to
poor Toil.
But the State is a Firm Friend of Toil, is it
not?
Oh, yes. As you will See.
|
Woodcut: Two figures. On the left, a laborer, bent
over. On his shirt is the word "Toil." On his back are
three huge bales, labeled, "Tariff Taxes," "Taxes on
Labor" and "Taxes on Labor Products." On the right,
another man, smiling, standing straight. On his back is
a single bale labled "Land Tax." A spring labeled "Land
Rent" is spraying $ into his hat. |
sales
taxes
trade
special
interests
privatization
theft
commons
rent
as provisioning for all
wealth
concentration
ownership,
|
LESSON XXXVI
— State High Wall ... Keeps Out Goods
... Lets In Men
|
What is this?
It is a High Wall. It is built by the Wise State
all round the Bounds of the Land to Keep Out Cheap
Goods that Foes might want to Send in.
But if the Wall keeps out Cheap Goods, the like
Goods our own Men make will be Dear, will they
not?
Yes, they May, but you see we will Keep our Cash
in our own Land, so we can Buy even if they are Dear.
And more, they will not be Dear long, for lots of
Works will be set up, and the Price will soon Fall to
a Fair Rate.
And poor Toil, will soon get Rich, will he
not?
So they Say. But see! there is a Hole in the Wall,
and All who Please may come in to Beat down Toil in
his Wage. Toil must buy Dear Goods, but Work for a
Cheap Wage. That is what it Means, but Toil Votes for
the Wall!
|
Woodcut: The scene is within a high wall, labeled
"Tariff Wall." On the right is a two-person booth with
three signs. Above one "Cheap Labor Market;" above the
other "Dear Living Market" and below them both, "'The
Tariff Protects the Working Man'." On the left, there
is a hole in the wall, through which people are
crawling, and walking over to the booths. |
tariff
trade
wages
prices
|
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Lessons 1-12 |
Lessons 13-24 | Lessons 25-36 | Lessons 37-48 | Lessons 49-60 | Lessons 61-70
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