Community
Most of us want to live in association with others. As
Henry George described in The Savannah, the
advantages of living near others are considerable. When
some of us can afford to keep more land than we need, as
a nest egg for our individual future, or for the
advantage of our grandchildren, others must commute long
distances to get from work we need and enjoy to land we
can afford to live on, and we may be forced in the
process to live in relatively isolated places, where
there is less infrastructure (e.g., sewers, city water,
paid firefighters) and fewer amenities (e.g., a choice of
grocery stores, a well-stocked library, established
schools). We spend our time and money commuting, and have
less to show for it.
Of course some of us value being in a rural location,
and would freely choose that option even if others were
available to us. But many of us would prefer to live in
association with others, with the benefits of
community.
H.G. Brown: Significant Paragraphs
from Henry George's Progress & Poverty, Chapter 4: Land
Speculation Causes Reduced Wages
In communities like the United States, where the user
of land generally prefers, if he can, to own it, and
where there is a great extent of land to overrun, this
cause operated with enormous power.
The immense area over which the population of the
United States is scattered shows this. The man who sets
out from the Eastern Seaboard in search of the margin of
cultivation, where he may obtain land without paying
rent, must, like the man who swam the river to get a
drink, pass for long distances through half-tilled farms,
and traverse vast areas of virgin soil, before he reaches
the point where land can be had free of rent i.e., by
homestead entry or pre-emption. He (and, with him, the
margin of cultivation) is forced so much farther than he
otherwise need have gone, by the speculation which is
holding these unused lands in expectation of increased
value in the future. And when he settles, he will, in his
turn, take up, if he can, more land than he can use, in
the belief that it will soon become valuable; and so
those who follow him are again forced farther on than the
necessities of production require, carrying the margin of
cultivation to still less productive, because still more
remote points.
If the land of superior quality as to location were
always fully used before land of inferior quality were
resorted to, no vacant lots would be left as a city
extended, nor would we find miserable shanties in the
midst of costly buildings. These lots, some of them
extremely valuable, are withheld from use, or from the
full use to which they might be put, because their
owners, not being able or not wishing to improve them,
prefer, in expectation of the advance of land values, to
hold them for a higher rate than could now be obtained
from those willing to improve them. And, in consequence
of this land being withheld from use, or from the full
use of which it is capable, the margin of the city is
pushed away so much farther from the center.
But when we reach the limits of the growing city the
actual margin of building, which corresponds to the
margin of cultivation in agriculture — we shall not
find the land purchasable at its value for agricultural
purposes, as it would be were rent determined simply by
present requirements; but we shall find that for a long
distance beyond the city, land bears a speculative value,
based upon the belief that it will be required in the
future for urban purposes, and that to reach the point at
which land can be purchased at a price not based upon
urban rent, we must go very far beyond the actual margin
of urban use. ... read the whole
chapter
H.G. Brown:
Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's
Progress & Poverty: 12.
Effect of Remedy Upon Various Economic Classes (in the
unabridged P&P:
Part IX: Effects of the Remedy — Chapter 3. Of the
effect upon individuals and classes)
When it is first proposed to put all taxes upon the
value of land, all landholders are likely to take the
alarm, and there will not be wanting appeals to the fears
of small farm and homestead owners, who will be told that
this is a proposition to rob them of their hard-earned
property. But a moment's reflection will show that this
proposition should commend itself to all whose interests
as landholders do not largely exceed their interests as
laborers or capitalists, or both. And further
consideration will show that though the large landholders
may lose relatively, yet even in their case there will be
an absolute gain. For, the increase in production will be
so great that labor and capital will gain very much more
than will be lost to private landownership, while in
these gains, and in the greater ones involved in a more
healthy social condition, the whole community, including
the landowners themselves, will share.
- It is manifest, of course, that the change I
propose will greatly benefit all those who live by
wages, whether of hand or of head -- laborers,
operatives, mechanics, clerks, professional men of all
sorts.
- It is manifest, also, that it will benefit all
those who live partly by wages and partly by the
earnings of their capital -- storekeepers, merchants,
manufacturers, employing or undertaking producers and
exchangers of all sorts from the peddler or drayman to
the railroad or steamship owner -- and
- it is likewise manifest that it will increase the
incomes of those whose incomes are drawn from the
earnings of capital. ...
...But the great gain of the working farmer can be
seen only when the effect upon the distribution of
population is considered. The destruction of speculative
land values would tend to diffuse population where it is
too dense and to concentrate it where it is too sparse;
to substitute for the tenement house, homes surrounded by
gardens, and fully to settle agricultural districts
before people were driven far from neighbors to look for
land. The people of the cities would thus get more of the
pure air and sunshine of the country, the people of the
country more of the economies and social life of the
city. If, as is doubtless the case, the application of
machinery tends to large fields, agricultural population
will assume the primitive form and cluster in villages.
The life of the average farmer is now unnecessarily
dreary. He is not only compelled to work early and late,
but he is cut off by the sparseness of population from
the conveniences, and amusements, the educational
facilities, and the social and intellectual opportunities
that come with the closer contact of man with man. He
would be far better off in all these respects, and his
labor would be far more productive, if he and those
around him held no more land than they wanted to use.
While his children, as they grew up, would neither be so
impelled to seek the excitement of a city nor would they
be driven so far away to seek farms of their own. Their
means of living would be in their own hands, and at home.
...
In short, the working farmer is both a laborer and a
capitalist, as well as a landowner, and it is by his
labor and capital that his living is made. His loss would
be nominal; his gain would be real and great. In varying
degrees is this true of all landholders. Many landholders
are laborers of one sort or another. This measure would
make no one poorer but such as could be made a great deal
poorer without being really hurt. It would cut down great
fortunes, but it would impoverish no one.
Wealth would not only be enormously increased; it
would be equally distributed. I do not mean that each
individual would get the same amount of wealth. That
would not be equal distribution, so long as different
individuals have different powers and different desires.
But I mean that wealth would be distributed in accordance
with the degree in which the industry, skill, knowledge,
or prudence of each contributed to the common stock. The
great cause which concentrates wealth in the hands of
those who do not produce, and takes it from the hands of
those who do, would be gone. The inequalities that
continued to exist would be those of nature, not the
artificial inequalities produced by the denial of natural
law. The nonproducer would no longer roll in luxury while
the producer got but the barest necessities of animal
existence. ...
read the whole chapter
H.G. Brown:
Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's
Progress & Poverty: 13 Effect
of Remedy Upon Social Ideals (in the unabridged
P&P:
Part IX: Effects of the Remedy — 4. Of the changes
that would be wrought in social organization and social
life)
To remove want and the fear of want, to give to all
classes leisure, and comfort, and independence, the
decencies and refinements of life, the opportunities of
mental and moral development, would be like turning water
into a desert. The sterile waste would clothe itself with
verdure, and the barren places where life seemed banned
would ere long be dappled with the shade of trees and
musical with the song of birds. Talents now hidden,
virtues unsuspected, would come forth to make human life
richer, fuller, happier, nobler. For
- in these round men who are stuck into
three-cornered holes, and three-cornered men who are
jammed into round holes;
- in these men who are wasting their energies in the
scramble to be rich;
- in these who in factories are turned into machines,
or are chained by necessity to bench or plow;
- in these children who are growing up in squalor,
and vice, and ignorance, are powers of the highest
order, talents the most splendid.
They need but the opportunity to bring them forth.
Consider the possibilities of a state of society that
gave that opportunity to all. Let imagination fill out
the picture; its colors grow too bright for words to
paint.
- Consider the moral elevation, the intellectual
activity, the social life.
- Consider how by a thousand actions and interactions
the members of every community are linked together, and
how in the present condition of things even the
fortunate few who stand upon the apex of the social
pyramid must suffer, though they know it not, from the
want, ignorance, and degradation that are
underneath.
- Consider these things and then say whether the
change I propose would not be for the benefit of every
one — even the greatest landholder? ...
read the whole chapter
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
God’s laws do not change. Though their
applications may alter with altering conditions, the same
principles of right and wrong that hold when men are few
and industry is rude also hold amid teeming populations
and complex industries. In our cities of millions and our
states of scores of millions, in a civilization where the
division of labor has gone so far that large numbers are
hardly conscious that they are land-users, it still
remains true that we are all land animals and can live
only on land, and that land is God’s bounty to all,
of which no one can be deprived without being murdered,
and for which no one can be compelled to pay another
without being robbed. But even in a state of society
where the elaboration of industry and the increase of
permanent improvements have made the need for private
possession of land wide-spread, there is no difficulty in
conforming individual possession with the equal right to
land. For as soon as any piece of land will yield to the
possessor a larger return than is had by similar labor on
other land a value attaches to it which is shown when it
is sold or rented. Thus, the value of the land itself,
irrespective of the value of any improvements in or on
it, always indicates the precise value of the benefit to
which all are entitled in its use, as distinguished from
the value which, as producer or successor of a producer,
belongs to the possessor in individual right.
To combine the advantages of private possession with
the justice of common ownership it is only necessary
therefore to take for common uses what value attaches to
land irrespective of any exertion of labor on it. The
principle is the same as in the case referred to, where a
human father leaves equally to his children things not
susceptible of specific division or common use. In that
case such things would be sold or rented and the value
equally applied.
It is on this common-sense principle that we, who term
ourselves single-tax men, would have the community
act.
We do not propose to assert equal rights to land by
keeping land common, letting any one use any part of it
at any time. We do not propose the task, impossible in
the present state of society, of dividing land in equal
shares; still less the yet more impossible task of
keeping it so divided.
We propose — leaving land in the private
possession of individuals, with full liberty on their
part to give, sell or bequeath it — simply to levy
on it for public uses a tax that shall equal the annual
value of the land itself, irrespective of the use made of
it or the improvements on it. And since this would
provide amply for the need of public revenues, we would
accompany this tax on land values with the repeal of all
taxes now levied on the products and processes of
industry — which taxes, since they take from the
earnings of labor, we hold to be infringements of the
right of property.
This we propose, not as a cunning device of human
ingenuity, but as a conforming of human regulations to
the will of God.
God cannot contradict himself nor impose on his
creatures laws that clash.
If it be God’s command to men that they should
not steal — that is to say, that they should
respect the right of property which each one has in the
fruits of his labor;
And if he be also the Father of all men, who in his
common bounty has intended all to have equal
opportunities for sharing;
Then, in any possible stage of civilization, however
elaborate, there must be some way in which the exclusive
right to the products of industry may be reconciled with
the equal right to land.
If the Almighty be consistent with himself, it cannot
be, as say those socialists referred to by you, that in
order to secure the equal participation of men in the
opportunities of life and labor we must ignore the right
of private property. Nor yet can it be, as you yourself
in the Encyclical seem to argue, that to secure the right
of private property we must ignore the equality of right
in the opportunities of life and labor. To say the one
thing or the other is equally to deny the harmony of
God’s laws.
But, the private possession of land, subject to the
payment to the community of the value of any special
advantage thus given to the individual, satisfies both
laws, securing to all equal participation in the bounty
of the Creator and to each the full ownership of the
products of his labor. ....read the whole
letter
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
MENTAL power is the motor of progress, and men tend to
advance in proportion to the mental power expended in
progression — the mental power which is devoted to
the extension of knowledge, the improvement of methods,
and the betterment of social conditions. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book X, Chapter 3, The Law of Human
Progress
To compare society to a boat. Her progress through
the water will not depend upon the exertion of her crew,
but upon the exertion devoted to propelling her. This
will be lessened by any expenditure of force required for
baling, or any expenditure of force in fighting among
themselves or in pulling in different directions.
Now, as in a separated state the whole powers of man are
required to maintain existence, and mental power is only
set free for higher uses by the association of men in
communities, which permits the division of labor and all
the economies which come with the co-operation of
increased numbers, association is the first essential of
progress. Improvement becomes possible as men come
together in peaceful association, and the wider and
closer the association, the greater the possibilities of
improvement. And as the wasteful expenditure of mental
power in conflict becomes greater or less as the moral
law which accords to each an equality of rights is
ignored or is recognized, equality (or justice) is the
second essential of progress.
Thus association in equality is the law of progress.
Association frees mental power for expenditure in
improvement, and equality (or justice, or freedom —
for the terms here signify the same thing, the
recognition of the moral law) prevents the dissipation of
this power in fruitless struggles. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book X, Chapter 3, The Law of Human Progress
... go to "Gems from
George"
Nic Tideman: The Structure of an
Inquiry into the Attractiveness of A Social Order Inspired
by the Ideas of Henry George
I. Ethical Principles
A. People own themselves and therefore own
what they produce.
B. People have obligations to share equally the
opportunities that are provided by
nature.
C. People are free to interact with other
competent adults on whatever terms are mutually
agreed.
D. People have obligations to pay the costs
that their intrusive behaviors impose on
others.
II. Ethical
Questions
A. What is the relationship
between justice (as embodied in the ethical principles)
and community (or peace or
harmony)?
B. How are the weak to be provided
for?
C. How should natural opportunities be
shared?
D. Who should be included in the group among
whom rent should be shared equally?
E. Is there an obligation to compensate those
whose presently recognized titles to land and other
exclusive natural opportunities will lose value when rent
is shared equally?
F. Can a person who is occupying a per capita
share of land reasonably ask to be left undisturbed
indefinitely on that land?
G. What is the moral status of "intellectual
property?"
H. What standards of environmental respect can
people reasonably require of others?
I. What forms of land use control are
consistent with the philosophy of Henry
George?
III. Efficiency
Questions
A. Would public collection of the rent of land
provide enough revenue for an appropriate public
sector?
B. How much revenue could public collection of rent
raise?
C. Is it possible to assess land with sufficient
accuracy?
D. How much growth can a community expect if it
shifts taxes from improvements to land?
E. To what extent does the benefit that one
community receives from shifting taxes from buildings to
land come at the expense of other
communities?
F. What is the impact of land taxes on land
speculation?
G. How, if at all, does the impact of shifting the
source of public revenue to land change if it is a whole
nation rather than just a community that makes the
shift?
H. Is there a danger that the application of Henry
George's ideas would lead to a world of
over-development?
I. How would natural resources be managed
appropriately if they were regarded as the common
heritage of humanity?
Read the whole
article
Bill Batt: How Our
Towns Got That Way (1996 speech)
Because our society is characterized by suburban
sprawl and is therefore motor vehicle dependent,
community is destroyed. George Kennan expresses this well
in the book cited earlier, but it is more empirically
documented in a recent article entitled "Bowling Alone", which David Broder of the
Washington Post considered the most important
academic article of 1995. The author of that piece,
Harvard Professor Bob Putnam, shows that our communal
relationships are declining, and that an ever smaller
proportion of the population is involved in social
activities of a cooperative and communal nature. As
Tocqueville noted, this used to be the unique strength of
American society; we're now losing it. Suburban sprawl
and the automobile play a large part in this. And the
reason we have these land-use configurations is in good
part, to my way of thinking, due to our property tax
policies and our subsidies to motor vehicle
transportation.
It doesn't take much reflection to realize that
the practices which we are following are unsustainable.
This is true not only environmentally but also
economically and socially. Author James Howard Kunstler
recently has described in his book Home
from Nowhere how our cities are becoming not only
ugly but unlivable. The irony is also that, by having
followed the legacy of classical economics, we could
easily have provided for all our government services
through taxes based on land value.... read the
whole article
Bill Batt: The
Compatibility of Georgist Economics and Ecological
Economics
The more cohesive the development of communities
is, the greater the synergy exists among its members.
Sprawl development not only increases the cost of
transportation and other infrastructure needed to service
these sites, it also reduces the extent to which people
are accessible to one another. There is considerable
indication that American society is losing this elusive
quality of community. When Harvard professor Robert
Putnam published his celebrated article Bowling Alone in January, 1995, it was
remarkable as much for the resonance that it generated
throughout the nation as for the message itself. David
Broder of the Washington Post pronounced Bowling Alone the most important academic
article that year. Putnam argued that our communal
relationships are declining, and that an ever smaller
proportion of the population is involved in social
activities of a cooperative and communal
nature.54 We used
to be a nation of joiners; increasingly now we’re a
nation of loners. As Tocqueville noted 150 years ago,
affiliative groups used to be the unique strength of
American society.55 Several hypotheses were offered
in this and subsequent studies to explain the decline in
the civic engagement of Americans — various
demographic changes, technological innovations such as
television, the changing role of government, the cultural
revolution, and so on. The land-use and transportation
patterns that have evolved in the post-war period are a
factor as well. The concepts of neighborhood and
community today no longer mean the same thing as they did
in the past. ...
Much of the loss of scale communities is due to
the fact that transportation planners have reconfigured
the urban areas of the country to serve the
automobile.58 It
stems from a fundamental confusion between what
geographers call accessibility and mobility. This
distinction is explained particularly well in a recent
text, The Geography of Urban
Transportation:
Accessibility refers to the number of
opportunities, also called activity sites, available
within a certain distance or travel time. Mobility refers
to the ability to move between different activity sites
(e.g., from home to a grocery store).59 ....
On the other hand, collection of economic rent,
whether it be from the use of land sites, fossil fuels,
fishing grounds, solar and wind energy settings,
electromagnetic spectrum frequencies, airport landing
timeslots, and or even air sinks facilitates their
highest and best use while leaving less attractive
settings unaffected. Where there exists the possibility
that environmentally sensitive sites or resources might
otherwise be exploited, then is the appropriate time to
institute focused CAC approaches, and with more attentive
and efficient administration for all involved. The
practice of concentrating economic activity in the more
limited footprint that pricing creates is consistent with
approaches taken in ecological economics. This is because
the economy is recognized as only one component of human
experience and the world system, not coterminous with it.
Daly, for instance, draws concentric circles to
illustrate the proper setting of the economic system
— inside the social and cultural system which
itself exists in a greater ecosystem. Collection of
economic rent has a centrifugal and concentrating effect
on human activity and hence upon the ecosystem itself. It
has a benign effect on ecosystems insofar as it
effectuates a steep and identifiable market gradient
between areas of heavy socio-economic activity and those
that bring no price at all. And yet by
facilitating closer contact between members of the human
community, it also fosters exchanges of a nature that are
outside the market economy — family relationships
and neighborhood activity.... read the whole
article
Henry George: Thy
Kingdom Come (1889 speech)
One cannot look, it seems to me, through nature
— whether one looks at the stars through a
telescope, or have the microscope reveal to one those
worlds that we find in drops of water. Whether one
considers the human frame, the adjustments of the animal
kingdom, or any department of physical nature, one must
see that there has been a contriver and adjuster, that
there has been an intent. So strong is that feeling, so
natural is it to our minds, that even people who deny the
Creative Intelligence are forced, in spite of themselves,
to talk of intent; the claws on one animal were intended,
we say, to climb with, the fins of another to propel it
through the water.
Yet, while in looking through the
laws of physical nature, we find
intelligence we do not so clearly find beneficence. But in
the great social fact that as
population increases, and improvements are made, and men
progress in civilisation, the one thing that rises
everywhere in value is land, and in this we may see a proof
of the beneficence of the Creator.
Why, consider what it means! It means
that the social laws are adapted to progressive humanity!
In a rude state of society where there is no need for
common expenditure, there is no value attaching to land.
The only value which attaches there is to things produced
by labour. But as civilisation goes on, as a
division of labour takes place, as people come into
centres, so do the common wants increase, and so does the
necessity for public revenue arise. And so in that
value which attaches to land, not by reason of anything the
individual does, but by reason of the growth of the
community, is a provision intended — we may safely
say intended — to meet that social want.
Just as society grows, so do
the common needs grow, and so grows this value attaching to
land — the provided fund from which they can be
supplied. Here is a value that may be taken, without
impairing the right of property, without taking anything
from the producer, without lessening the natural rewards of
industry and thrift. Nay, here is a value that must be
taken if we would prevent the most monstrous of all
monopolies. What does all this mean? It means that
in the creative plan, the natural advance in civilisation
is an advance to a greater and greater equality instead of
to a more and more monstrous inequality.... Read
the whole speech
Weld Carter: An
Introduction to Henry George
The Ethics of Taxation
It was but a short step from the ethics of property to
the ethics of taxation. George's position here was that
as labor and capital rightfully and unconditionally own
what they produce, no one can rightfully appropriate any
of their earnings; nor can the State. On the other hand,
land value is always a socially created value, never the
result of action by the owner of the land. Therefore this
is a value that must be taken by society; otherwise,
those who comprise the social whole are deprived of what
is rightfully theirs. Furthermore, to charge the owner
for this value, in the form of taxation, is only to
collect from him the precise value of the benefit he
receives from society.
As to the justice of taxes on
products, George spoke of "...all taxes now levied on the
products and processes of industry -- which taxes, since
they take from the earnings of labor, we hold to be
infringements of the right of property."
Of the justice of
taxes on land values, he said, "Adam Smith speaks of
incomes as 'enjoyed under the protection of the state'; and
this is the ground upon which the equal taxation of all
species of property is commonly insisted upon -- that it is
equally protected by the state. The basis of this idea is
evidently that the enjoyment of property is made possible
by the state -- that there is a value created and
maintained by the community, which is justly called upon to
meet community expenses. Now of what values is this true?
Only of the value of land. This is a value that does not
arise until a community is formed, and that, unlike other
values, grows with the growth of the community. It exists
only as the community exists. Scatter again the largest
community, and land, now so valuable, would have no value
at all. With every increase of population the value of land
rises; with every decrease it falls. ...
"The tax upon land values is,
therefore, the most just and equal of all taxes. It falls
only upon those who receive from society a peculiar and
valuable benefit, and upon them in proportion to the
benefit they receive. It is the taking by the community,
for the use of the community, that value which is the
creation of the community. It is the application the common
property to common uses." ...read the
whole article
Bill Batt: Stemming
Sprawl: The Fiscal Approach
SPRAWL DEVELOPMENT CONFIGURATIONS are not natural.
Were it not for incentives to the contrary, people would
choose to live and work in close proximity. This has been
well documented in studies of every era and
place.[1] Only when
incentives are put in place that induce people to live in
other circumstances do they choose settlement patterns
that are remote, less accessible, and alienating. Only in
the industrial era and after have outlying areas become
more attractive. Tracing the history of such developments
makes it clear that they are a response to less livable
conditions of urban life as they have evolved — the
pollution of air and water, loss of nature, loss of
privacy, housing deficiencies, and so on. In more recent
years, differentials in taxation and the quality of
services (such as schools) have also played a role in
making the suburbs more attractive. ... read the whole article
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 5: Reinventing the Commons
(pages 65-78)
Trust and liquidity, I eventually realized, are just
two small rivulets in an enormous river of common wealth
that encompasses nature, community, and culture.
Nature’s gifts are all those wondrous things,
living and nonliving, that we inherit from the creation.
Community includes the myriad threads, tangible and
intangible, that connect us to other humans efficiently.
Culture embodies our vast store of science, inventions,
and art. ...
Social Assets
The value of community and cultural assets has been less
studied than that of natural assets. However, we can get
an order of magnitude by considering a few examples.
The Internet has contributed significantly to the U.S.
economy since the 1990s. It has spawned many new
companies (America Online, Amazon.com, Ebay, to name a
few), boosted sales and efficiency of existing companies,
and stimulated educational, cultural, and informational
exchange. How much is all that worth?
There’s no right answer to this
question.However, a study by Cisco Systems and the
University of Texas found that the Internet generated
$830 billion in revenue in 2000. Assuming the asset value
of the Internet is 16.5 times the yearly revenue it
generates, we arrive at an estimated value of $13
trillion. Another valuable social asset is the complex
system of stock exchanges, laws, and communications media
that makes it possible for Americans to sell stock
easily. Assuming that this socially created
“liquidity premium” accounts for 30 percent
of stock market capitalization, its value in 2006 was
roughly $5 trillion. If that much equity were put in a
mutual fund whose shares belonged to all Americans, the
average household would be $45,000 richer.
Not-for-profit cultural activities also pump billions
of dollars into the U.S. economy.A 2002 study by
Americans for the Arts found that nonprofit art and
cultural activities generate $134 billion in economic
value every year, including $89 billion in household
income and $24 billion in tax revenues. Using the 16.5
multiplier suggests that America’s cultural assets
are worth in excess of $2 trillion.
These three examples alone add up to about $20
trillion. The long list of other social assets —
including scientific and technical knowledge, our legal
and political systems, our universities, libraries,
accounting procedures, and transportation infrastructure
— suggest that the total value of our social assets
is comparable in magnitude to that of our natural assets.
...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 7: Universal Birthrights
(pages 101-116)
Capitalism and community aren’t natural allies.
Capitalism’s emphasis on individual acquisition and
consumption is usually antithetical to the needs of
community. Where capitalism is about the pursuit of
self-interest, community is about connecting to —
and at times assisting — others. It’s driven
not by monetary gain but by caring, giving, and
sharing.
While the opportunity to advance one’s
self-interest is essential to happiness, so too is
community. No person is an island, and no one can truly
attain happiness without connection to others. This
raises the question of how to promote community. One view
is that community can’t be promoted; it either
arises spontaneously or it doesn’t. Another view is
that community can be strengthened through public
schools, farmers’ markets, charitable gifts, and
the like. It’s rarely imagined that community can
be built into our economic operating system. In this
chapter I show how it can be — if our operating
system includes a healthy commons sector. ...
read the whole chapter
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