http://www.cooperativeindividualism.org/darrow-clarence_on-land-ownership.html
The Land Belongs to the
People
Clarence Darrow
[Reprinted from Everyman, October, 1916]
If we could imagine some wise being somewhere in the
clouds, looking down upon the earth and seeing men with
their manner of life and their devious activities, we could
imagine that such a being would not look upon man with the
same reverence and respect with which man looks upon
himself. Such a being would see great spaces of vacant
land, hundreds of miles, without any population, miles and
miles of fertile land with no people living on it, and
would look into great huddles of men in our big cities and
find a busy hive of men and women working, fighting,
toiling, stealing, living five, six, ten, twenty stories up
in the air, because there is not room enough on earth! He
would look at man with all his goings and his comings and
wonder what sort of brain he has; he would look at him and
consider him far inferior to the ant who organizes his hill
with system and plan and purpose so that all may
live.
He would think man did not understand the science of social
life as well as the bee who builds his home so that all the
bees may live and all have substantially the same chance
for life. And such a being would doubtless wonder whether
man was really worth while to bother with or to save, and
would probably respect that portion of the apes who refuse
to evolve into men. He certainly could not understand how
man, with his method of life, his warfare upon his fellows,
his ill adjustments, could claim to be the wisest and the
best and the greatest and the most worth while of all the
animals that live upon the earth.
This earth is a little raft moving in the endless sea of
space, and the mass of its human inhabitants are hanging on
as best they can. It is as if some raft filled with
shipwrecked sailors should be floating on the ocean, and a
few of the strongest and most powerful would take all the
raft they could get and leave the most of the people,
especially the ones who did the work, hanging to the edges
by their eyebrows. These men who have taken possession of
this raft, this little planet in this endless space, are
not even content with taking all there is and leaving the
rest barely enough to hold onto, but they think so much of
themselves and their brief day that while they live they
must make rules and laws and regulations that parcel out
the earth for thousands of years after they are dead and,
gone, so that their descendants and others of their kind
may do in the tenth generation exactly what they are doing
today — keeping the earth and all the good things of
the earth and compelling the great mass of mankind to toil
for them.
Now, the question is, how are you going to get it back?
Everybody who thinks knows that private ownership of the
land is wrong. If ten thousand men can own America, then
one man can own it, and if one man may own it he may take
all that the rest produce or he may kill them if he sees
fit. It is inconsistent with the spirit of manhood. No
person who thinks can doubt but that he was born upon this
planet with the same birthright that came to every man born
like him. And it is for him to defend that birthright. And
the man who will not defend it, whatever the cost, is
fitted only to be a slave. The earth belongs to the people
— if they can get it — because if you cannot
get it, it makes no difference whether you have a right to
it or not, and if you can get it, it makes no difference
whether you have a right to it or not, you just take it.
The earth has been taken from the many by the few. It made
no difference that they had no right to it; they took
it.
Now, there are some methods of getting access to the earth
which are easier than others. The easiest, perhaps, that
has been contrived is by means of taxation of the land
values and land values alone; and I need only say a little
upon that question. One trouble with it which makes it
almost impossible to achieve, is that it is so simple and
so easy. You cannot get people to do anything that is
simple; they want it complex so they can be fooled.
Now the theory of Henry George and of those who really
believe in the common ownership of land is that the public
should take not alone taxation from the land, but the
public should take to itself the whole value of the land
that has been created by the public — should take it
all. It should be a part of the public wealth, should be
used for public improvements, for pensions, and belong to
the people who create the wealth — which is a strange
doctrine in these strange times. It can be done simply and
easily; it can be done by taxation. All the wealth created
by the public could be taken back by the public and then
poverty would disappear, most of it at least. The method is
so simple, and so legal even — sometimes a thing is
legal if it is simple — that it is the easiest
substantial reform for men to accomplish, and when it is
done this great problem of poverty, the problem of the
ages, will be almost solved. We may need go farther.
Henry George said, in "Progress and
Poverty" that while the land tax may not
bring about the dream of the socialist, it would still
prepare the way for that — or for any dream.
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