Is Democracy Enough
to Create Equal Liberty and Shared Prosperity?
This theme should be more precisely titled: Is a
democratic republic enough to insure our equal liberty
and shared prosperity?
A chattel slave knew he was a slave; he knew he
was bought to labor and he knew the indentures of his
servitude. He endured conditions every day which
reminded him of his status. In a democracy such as
this, the landless laborer is given what is called the
freeman's certificate, a vote, but he is nevertheless a
slave under a system of private ownership of the rent
of land. He has to pay a fellow mortal for the right to
use the earth, the only source from which he can draw
his sustenance. — Francis Neilson, Man at
The Crossroads, p.219
"It is not enough that men should
vote; it is not enough that they should be
theoretically equal before the law. They must have
liberty to avail themselves of the opportunities and
means of life; they must stand on equal terms with
reference to the bounty of nature." - Henry
George, (1839 -1897)
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress & Poverty,
Chapter 5: The Basic Cause of Poverty (in the
unabridged:
Book V: The Problem Solved)
In all our long investigation we have been advancing
to this simple truth: That as land is necessary to the
exertion of labor in the production of wealth, to command
the land which is necessary to labor, is to command all
the fruits of labor save enough to enable labor to exist.
We have been advancing as through an enemy's country, in
which every step must be secured, every position
fortified, and every bypath explored; for this simple
truth, in its application to social and political
problems, is hid from the great masses of men partly by
its very simplicity, and in greater part by widespread
fallacies and erroneous habits of thought which lead them
to look in every direction but the right one for an
explanation of the evils which oppress and threaten the
civilized world. And back of these elaborate
fallacies and misleading theories is an active, energetic
power, a power that in every country, be its political
forms what they may, writes laws and molds thought
— the power of a vast and dominant pecuniary
interest.
... For land is the habitation of man, the storehouse
upon which be must draw for all his needs, the material
to which his labor must be applied for the supply of all
his desires; for even the products of the sea cannot be
taken, the light of the sun enjoyed, or any of the forces
of nature utilized, without the use of land or its
products. On the land we are born, from it we live, to it
we return again — children of the soil as truly as
is the blade of grass or the flower of the field. Take
away from man all that belongs to land, and he is but a
disembodied spirit. Material progress cannot rid
us of our dependence upon land; it can but add to the
power of producing wealth from land; and hence, when
land is monopolized, it might go on to infinity
without increasing wages or improving the condition of
those who have but their labor. It can but add
to the value of land and the power which its possession
gives. Everywhere, in all times, among all peoples, the
possession of land is the base of aristocracy, the
foundation of great fortunes, the source of power. ...
read the
whole chapter
H.G. Brown:
Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's
Progress & Poverty: 14
Liberty, and Equality of Opportunity (in the unabridged
P&P:
Part X: The Law of Human Progress — Chapter 5: The
Central Truth)
The truth to which we were led in the
politico-economic branch of our inquiry is as clearly
apparent in the rise and fall of nations and the growth
and decay of civilizations, and it accords with those
deep-seated recognitions of relation and sequence that we
denominate moral perceptions. Thus are given to our
conclusions the greatest certitude and highest
sanction.
This truth involves both a menace and a promise.
It shows that the evils arising from the unjust
and unequal distribution of wealth, which are becoming
more and more apparent as modern civilization goes on,
are not incidents of progress, but tendencies which must
bring progress to a halt; that they will not cure
themselves, but, on the contrary, must, unless their
cause is removed, grow greater and greater, until they
sweep us back into barbarism by the road every previous
civilization has trod. But it also shows that
these evils are not imposed by natural laws; that they
spring solely from social maladjustments which ignore
natural laws, and that in removing their cause we shall
be giving an enormous impetus to progress.
The poverty which in the midst of abundance
pinches and embrutes men, and all the manifold evils
which flow from it, spring from a denial of
justice. In permitting the monopolization of the
opportunities which nature freely offers to all, we have
ignored the fundamental law of justice — for, so
far as we can see, when we view things upon a large
scale, justice seems to be the supreme law of the
universe. But by sweeping away this injustice and
asserting the rights of all men to natural opportunities,
we shall conform ourselves to the law —
- we shall remove the great cause of unnatural
inequality in the distribution of wealth and
power;
- we shall abolish poverty;
- tame the ruthless passions of greed;
- dry up the springs of vice and misery;
- light in dark places the lamp of knowledge;
- give new vigor to invention and a fresh impulse to
discovery;
- substitute political strength for political
weakness; and
- make tyranny and anarchy impossible.
The reform I have proposed accords with all that is
politically, socially, or morally desirable. It has the
qualities of a true reform, for it will make all other
reforms easier. What is it but the carrying out in letter
and spirit of the truth enunciated in the Declaration of
Independence — the "self-evident" truth that is the
heart and soul of the Declaration —"That all men
are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator
with certain inalienable rights; that among these are
life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!"
These rights are denied when the equal right to land
— on which and by which men alone can live —
is denied. Equality of political rights will not
compensate for the denial of the equal right to the
bounty of nature. Political liberty, when the equal right
to land is denied, becomes, as population increases and
invention goes on, merely the liberty to compete for
employment at starvation wages. This is the
truth that we have ignored. And so
- there come beggars in our streets and tramps on our
roads; and
- poverty enslaves men who we boast are
political sovereigns; and
- want breeds ignorance that our schools cannot
enlighten; and
- citizens vote as their masters dictate; and
- the demagogue usurps the part of the statesman;
and
- gold weighs in the scales of justice; and
- in high places sit those who do not pay to
civic virtue even the compliment of hypocrisy;
and
- the pillars of the republic that we thought so
strong already bend under an increasing strain.
We honor Liberty in name and in form. We set up her
statues and sound her praises. But we have not fully
trusted her. And with our growth so grow her demands. She
will have no half service!
Liberty! it is a word to conjure with, not to vex the
ear in empty boastings. For Liberty means Justice, and
Justice is the natural law — the law of health and
symmetry and strength, of fraternity and
co-operation.
They who look upon Liberty as having
accomplished her mission when she has abolished
hereditary privileges and given men the ballot, who think
of her as having no further relations to the everyday
affairs of life, have not seen her real grandeur
— to them the poets who have sung of her must seem
rhapsodists, and her martyrs fools! As the sun is the
lord of life, as well as of light; as his beams not
merely pierce the clouds, but support all growth, supply
all motion, and call forth from what would otherwise be a
cold and inert mass all the infinite diversities of being
and beauty, so is liberty to mankind. It is not for an
abstraction that men have toiled and died; that in every
age the witnesses of Liberty have stood forth, and the
martyrs of Liberty have suffered.
We speak of Liberty as one thing, and of virtue,
wealth, knowledge, invention, national strength, and
national independence as other things. But, of all these,
Liberty is the source, the mother, the necessary
condition. ...
In our time, as in times before, creep on the
insidious forces that, producing inequality, destroy
Liberty. On the horizon the clouds begin to lower.
Liberty calls to us again. We must follow her further; we
must trust her fully. Either we must wholly accept her or
she will not stay. It is not enough that men
should vote; it is not enough that they should be
theoretically equal before the law. They must have
liberty to avail themselves of the opportunities and
means of life; they must stand on equal terms with
reference to the bounty of nature. Either this,
or Liberty withdraws her light! Either this, or darkness
comes on, and the very forces that progress has evolved
turn to powers that work destruction. This is the
universal law. This is the lesson of the centuries.
Unless its foundations be laid in justice the social
structure cannot stand.
Our primary social adjustment is a denial of
justice. In allowing one man to own the land on which and
from which other men must live, we have made them his
bondsmen in a degree which increases as material progress
goes on. This is the subtile alchemy that in
ways they do not realize is extracting from the masses in
every civilized country the fruits of their weary toil;
that is instituting a harder and more hopeless slavery in
place of that which has been destroyed; that is bringing
political despotism out of political freedom, and must
soon transmute democratic institutions into anarchy.
It is this that turns the blessings of material
progress into a curse. It is this that crowds human
beings into noisome cellars and squalid tenement houses;
that fills prisons and brothels; that goads men with want
and consumes them with greed; that robs women of the
grace and beauty of perfect womanhood; that takes from
little children the joy and innocence of life's
morning.
Civilization so based cannot continue. The eternal
laws of the universe forbid it. Ruins of dead empires
testify, and the witness that is in every soul answers,
that it cannot be. It is something grander than
Benevolence, something more august than Charity —
it is Justice herself that demands of us to right this
wrong. Justice that will not be denied; that cannot be
put off — Justice that with the scales carries the
sword. Shall we ward the stroke with liturgies and
prayers? Shall we avert the decrees of immutable law by
raising churches when hungry infants moan and weary
mothers weep? ...
The fiat has gone forth! With steam and electricity,
and the new powers born of progress, forces have entered
the world that will either compel us to a higher plane or
overwhelm us, as nation after nation, as civilization
after civilization, have been overwhelmed before. It is
the delusion which precedes destruction that sees in the
popular unrest with which the civilized world is
feverishly pulsing only the passing effect of ephemeral
causes. Between democratic ideas and the
aristocratic adjustments of society there is an
irreconcilable conflict. Here in the United
States, as there in Europe, it may be seen arising.
- We cannot go on permitting men to vote and forcing
them to tramp.
- We cannot go on educating boys and girls in our
public schools and then refusing them the right to earn
an honest living.
- We cannot go on prating of the inalienable
rights of man and then denying the inalienable right to
the bounty of the Creator. ...
read the whole chapter
Henry George:
The Land
Question (1881)
We have here abolished all hereditary privileges
and legal distinctions of class. Monarchy, aristocracy,
prelacy, we have swept them all away. We have carried
mere political democracy to its ultimate. Every child
born in the United States may aspire to be President.
Every man, even though he be a tramp or a pauper, has a
vote, and one man's vote counts for as much as any other
man's vote. Before the law all citizens are absolutely
equal. In the name of the people all laws run. They are
the source of all power, the fountain of all honor. In
their name and by their will all government is carried
on; the highest officials are but their servants.
Primogeniture and entail we have abolished wherever they
existed. We have and have had free trade in land. We
started with something infinitely better than any scheme
of peasant proprietorship which it is possible to carry
into effect in Great Britain. We have had for our public
domain the best part of an immense continent. We have had
the preemption law and the homestead law. It has been our
boast that here every one who wished it could have a
farm. We have had full liberty of speech and of the
press. We have not merely common schools, but high
schools and universities, open to all who may choose to
attend. Yet here the same social difficulties apparent on
the other side of the Atlantic are beginning to appear.
It is already clear that our democracy is a vain
pretense, our make-believe of equality a sham and a
fraud. ...
Even if universal history did not
teach the lesson, it is in the United States already
becoming very evident that political equality can continue
to exist only upon a basis of social equality; that where
the disparity in the distribution of wealth increases,
political democracy only makes easier the concentration of
power, and must inevitably lead to tyranny and anarchy. And
it is already evident that there is nothing in political
democracy, nothing in popular education, nothing in any of
our American institutions, to prevent the most enormous
disparity in the distribution of wealth. Nowhere in the
world are such great fortunes growing up as in the United
States. Considering that the average income of the working
masses of our people is only a few hundred dollars a year,
a fortune of a million dollars is a monstrous thing–a
more monstrous and dangerous thing under a democratic
government than anywhere else. Yet fortunes of ten and
twelve million dollars are with us ceasing to be
noticeable. We already have citizens whose wealth can be
estimated only in hundreds of millions, and before the end
of the century, if present tendencies continue, we are
likely to have fortunes estimated in thousands of
millions–such monstrous fortunes as the world has
never seen since the growth of similar fortunes ate out the
heart of Rome. And the necessary correlative of the growth
of such fortunes is the impoverishment and loss of
independence on the part of the masses. These great
aggregations of wealth are like great trees, which strike
deep roots and spread wide branches, and which, by sucking
up the moisture from the soil and intercepting the
sunshine, stunt and kill the vegetation around them. When a
capital of a million dollars comes into competition with
capitals of thousands of dollars, the smaller capitalists
must be driven out of the business or destroyed. With great
capital nothing can compete save great capital. Hence,
every aggregation of wealth increases the tendency to the
aggregation of wealth, and decreases the possibility of the
employee ever becoming more than an employee, compelling
him to compete with his fellows as to who will work
cheapest for the great capitalist – a competition
that can have but one result, that of forcing wages to the
minimum at which the supply of labor can be kept up. Where
we are is not so important as in what direction we are
going, and in the United States all tendencies are clearly
in this direction. A while ago, and any journeyman
shoemaker could set up in business for himself with the
savings of a few months. But now the operative shoemaker
could not in a lifetime save enough from his wages to go
into business for himself. And, now that great capital has
entered agriculture, it must be with the same results. The
large farmer, who can buy the latest machinery at the
lowest cash prices and use it to the best advantage, who
can run a straight furrow for miles, who can make special
rates with railroad companies, take advantage of the
market, and sell in large lots for the least commission,
must drive out the small farmer of the early American type
just as the shoe factory has driven out the journeyman
shoemaker. And this is going on today. ... read the whole
article
Henry George: Ode to Liberty (1877
speech)
WE HONOR LIBERTY in name and in form. We set up
her statues and sound her praises. But we have not fully
trusted her. And with our growth so grow her demands. She
will have no half service! Liberty! it is a word to
conjure with, not to vex the ear in empty boastings. For
Liberty means Justice, and Justice is the natural law
— the law of health and symmetry and strength, of
fraternity and co-operation.
They who look upon Liberty as
having accomplished her mission when she has abolished
hereditary privileges and given men the ballot, who think
of her as having no further relations to the everyday
affairs of life, have not seen her real grandeur
— to them the poets who have sung of her must seem
rhapsodists, and her martyrs fools!
...
In our time, as in
times before, creep on the insidious forces that, producing
inequality, destroy Liberty. On the horizon the
clouds begin to lower. Liberty calls to us again. We must
follow her further; we must trust her fully. Either we must
wholly accept her or she will not stay. It
is not enough that men should vote; it is not enough that
they should be theoretically equal before the law. They
must have liberty to avail themselves of the opportunities
and means of life; they must stand on equal terms with
reference to the bounty of nature. Either this, or
Liberty withdraws her light! Either this, or darkness comes
on, and the very forces that progress has evolved turn to
powers that work destruction. This is the universal law.
This is the lesson of the centuries. Unless its foundations
be laid in justice the social structure cannot
stand.
Our primary social adjustment is
a denial of justice. In allowing one man to own the land
on which and from which other men must live, we have made
them his bondsmen in a degree which increases as material
progress goes on. This is the subtle alchemy that
in ways they do not realize is extracting from the masses
in every civilized country the fruits of their weary
toil; that is instituting a harder and more hopeless
slavery in place of that which has been destroyed; that
is bringing political despotism out of political freedom,
andmust soon transmute democratic
institutions into anarchy.
In the very centers of our civilization today are
want and suffering enough to make sick at heart whoever
does not close his eyes and steel his nerves. Dare we
turn to the Creator and ask Him to relieve it? Supposing
the prayer were heard, and at the behest with which the
universe sprang into being there should glow in the sun a
greater power; new virtue fill the air; fresh vigor the
soil; that for every blade of grass that now grows two
should spring up, and the seed that now increases
fifty-fold should increase a hundredfold! Would poverty be abated or want relieved? Manifestly
no!temporary. The new powers streaming through the material
universe could be utilized only through land. And land,
being private property, the classes that now monopolize
the bounty of the Creator would monopolize all the new
bounty. Land owners would alone be benefited. Rents would
increase, but wages would still tend to the starvation
point!
This is not merely a deduction of political
economy; it is a fact of experience. We know it because
we have seen it. Within our own times, under our very
eyes, that Power which is above all, and in all, and
through all; that Power of which the whole universe is
but the manifestation; that Power which maketh all
things, and without which is not anything made that is
made, has increased the bounty which men may enjoy, as
truly as though the fertility of nature had been
increased.
Whatever benefit would accrue would be but
- Into the mind of one came the thought that
harnessed steam for the service of mankind.
- To the inner ear of another was whispered the
secret that compels the lightning to bear a message
around the globe.
- In every direction have the laws of matter
been revealed; in every department of industry have
arisen arms of iron and fingers of steel, whose effect
upon the production of wealth has been precisely the same
as an increase in the fertility of nature.
What has been the result? Simply
that land owners get all the gain. The wonderful
discoveries and inventions of our century have neither
increased wages nor lightened toil. The effect has simply
been to make the few richer; the many more helpless! Can
it be that the gifts of the Creator may be thus
misappropriated with impunity? Is it a light thing
that labor should be robbed of its earnings while greed
rolls in wealth — that the many should want while
the few are surfeited? Turn to history, and on every page
may be read the lesson that such wrong never goes
unpunished; that the Nemesis that follows injustice never
falters nor sleeps! Look around today. Can this state of
things continue? May we even say, “After us the
deluge!” Nay; the pillars of the state are
trembling even now, and the very foundations of society
begin to quiver with pent-up forces that glow underneath.
The struggle that must either revivify, or convulse in
ruin, is near at hand, if it be not already begun. The
fiat has gone forth! With steam and electricity, and the
new powers born of progress, forces have entered the
world that will either compel us to a higher plane or
overwhelm us, as nation after nation, as civilization
after civilization, have been overwhelmed before. It is
the delusion which precedes destruction that sees in the
popular unrest with which the civilized world is
feverishly pulsing only the passing effect of ephemeral
causes. Between democratic ideas and the
aristocratic adjustments of society there is an
irreconcilable conflict. Here in the United
States, as there in Europe, it may be seen arising. We
cannot go on permitting men to vote and forcing them to
tramp. We cannot go on educating boys and girls in our
public schools and then refusing them the right to earn
an honest living. We cannot go on
prating of the inalienable rights of man and then denying
the inalienable right to the bounty of the
Creator. Even now, in old bottles the new wine
begins to ferment, and elemental forces gather for the
strife! ... read the
whole speech
Henry George: Moses, Apostle of Freedom
(1878 speech)
We boast of equality before the law; yet
notoriously justice is deaf to the call of those who have
no gold and blind to the sin of those who have.
We pride ourselves upon our common
schools; yet after our boys and girls are educated we
vainly ask: "What shall we do with them?" And about our
colleges children are growing up in vice and crime, because
from their homes poverty has driven all refining
influences. We pin our faith to universal suffrage; yet
with all power in the hands of the people, the control of
public affairs is passing into the hands of a class of
professional politicians, and our governments are, in many
cases, becoming but a means for robbery of the
people.
We have prohibited hereditary
distinctions, we have forbidden titles of nobility; yet
there is growing up an aristocracy of wealth as powerful
and merciless as any that ever held sway.... read the whole
speech Henry George: The Wages of Labor
The evil condition of labor is manifest in all
countries! The miserly and wretchedness
are alike felt in countries of different religions
and of none; in monarchies and republics; where industry
is simple and where it is elaborate; and amid all
varieties of industrial customs and relations. And, there
is one world-wide common cause!
This common cause is clear when we
consider that, since labor must find its workshop and
reservoir in land, the labor question is but another name
for the land question! And see how fully adequate is this
cause! ...
A strong, absolute ruler might hope
by such regulations to alleviate the conditions of chattel
slaves. But the tendency of our times is toward democracy,
and democratic States are necessarily weaker in
paternalism, while, in the industrial slavery growing out
of private ownership of land that prevails in Christendom
today, it is not the master who forces the slave to labor,
but the slave who urges the master to let him
labor.
Thus, the greatest difficulty in
enforcing such regulations comes from those whom they are
intended to benefit. It is not, far instance, the masters
who make it difficult to enforce restrictions on child
labor in factories, but the mothers, who, Prompted by
poverty, misrepresent the ages of their children even to
the masters and teach the children to
misrepresent.... read the whole article
Henry George: The Land for the
People (1889 speech)
Henry George: Political
Dangers (Chapter 2 of Social Problems, 1883)
[07] Thus the mere growth of
society involves danger of the gradual conversion of
government into something independent of and beyond the
people, and the gradual seizure of its powers by a ruling
class — though not necessarily a class marked off
by personal titles and a hereditary status, for, as
history shows, personal titles and hereditary status do
not accompany the concentration of power, but follow it.
The same methods which, in a little town where each knows
his neighbor and matters of common interest are under the
common eye, enable the citizens freely to govern
themselves, may, in a great city, as we have in many
cases seen, enable an organized ring of plunderers to
gain and hold the government. So, too, as we see in
Congress, and even in our State legislatures, the growth
of the country and the greater number of interests make
the proportion of the votes of a representative, of which
his constituents know or care to know, less and less. And
so, too, the executive and judicial departments tend
constantly to pass beyond the scrutiny of the people.
can seize power. The very poor have not spirit and
intelligence enough to resist; the very rich have too
much at stake.
[11] The rise in the United
States of monstrous fortunes, the aggregation of enormous
wealth in the hands of corporations, necessarily implies
the loss by the people of governmental control.
Democratic forms may be maintained, but there can be as
much tyranny and misgovernment under democratic forms as
any other — in fact, they lend themselves most
readily to tyranny and misgovernment. Forms count for
little. The Romans expelled their kings, and continued to
abhor the very name of king. But under the name of
Cæsars and Imperators, that at first meant no more
than our "Boss," they crouched before tyrants more
absolute than kings. We have already, under the popular
name of "bosses," developed political Cæsars in
municipalities and states. If this development continues,
in time there will come a national boss. We are young but
we are growing. The day may arrive when the "Boss of
America" will be to the modern world what Cæsar was
to the Roman world. This, at least, is certain:
Democratic government in more than name can exist only
where wealth is distributed with something like equality
— where the great mass of citizens are personally
free and independent, neither fettered by their poverty
nor made subject by their wealth. There is, after all,
some sense in a property qualification. The man who is
dependent on a master for his living is not a free man.
To give the suffrage to slaves is only to give votes to
their owners. That universal suffrage may add to, instead
of decreasing, the political power of wealth we see when
mill-owners and mine operators vote their hands. The
freedom to earn, without fear or favor, a comfortable
living, ought to go with the freedom to vote. Thus alone
can a sound basis for republican institutions be secured.
How can a man be said to have a country where he has no
right to a square inch of soil; where he has nothing but
his hands, and. urged by starvation, must bid against his
fellows for the privilege of using them? When it comes to
voting tramps, some principle has been carried to a
ridiculous and dangerous extreme. I have known elections
to be decided by the carting of paupers from the
almshouse to the polls. But such decisions can scarcely
be in the interest of good government.
[12] Beneath all political
problems lies the social problem of the distribution of
wealth. This our people do not generally recognize, and
they listen to quacks who propose to cure the symptoms
without touching the disease. "Let us elect good men to
office," say the quacks. Yes; let us catch little birds
by sprinkling salt on their tails!
[13] It behooves us to look
facts in the face. The experiment of popular government
in the United States is clearly a failure. Not that it is
a failure everywhere and in everything. An experiment of
this kind does not have to be fully worked out to be
proved a failure. But speaking generally of the whole
country, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the
Lakes to the Gulf, our government by the people has in
large degree become, is in larger degree becoming,
government by the strong and unscrupulous.
[14] The people, of course,
continue to vote; but the people are losing their power.
Money and organization tell more and more in elections.
In some sections bribery has become chronic, and numbers
of voters expect regularly to sell their votes. In some
sections large employers regularly bulldoze their hands
into voting as they wish. In municipal, State and Federal
politics the power of the "machine" is increasing. In
many places it has become so strong that the ordinary
citizen has no more influence in the government under
which he lives than he would have in China. He is, in
reality, not one of the governing classes, but one of the
governed. He occasionally, in disgust, votes for "the
other man," or "the other party;" but, generally, to find
that he has effected only a change of masters, or secured
the same masters under different names. And he is
beginning to accept the situation, and to leave politics
to politicians, as something with which an honest,
self-respecting man cannot afford to meddle.
[15] We are steadily
differentiating a governing class, or rather a class of
Pretorians, who make a business of gaining political
power and then selling it. The type of the rising party
leader is not the orator or statesman of an earlier day,
but the shrewd manager, who knows how to handle the
workers, how to combine pecuniary interests, how to
obtain money and to spend it, how to gather to himself
followers and to secure their allegiance. One party
machine is becoming complementary to the other party
machine, the politicians, like the railroad managers,
having discovered that combination pays better than
competition. So rings are made impregnable and great
pecuniary interests secure their ends no matter how
elections go. There are sovereign States so completely in
the hands of rings and corporations that it seems as if
nothing short of a revolutionary uprising of the people
could dispossess them. Indeed, whether the General
Government has not already passed beyond popular control
may be doubted. Certain it is that possession of the
General Government has for some time past secured
possession. And for one term, at least, the Presidential
chair has been occupied by a man not elected to it. This,
of course, was largely due to the crookedness of the man
who was elected, and to the lack of principle in his
supporters. Nevertheless, it occurred. ... read the
entire essay
Henry George:
Concentrations of Wealth Harm America
(excerpt from Social
Problems)
(1883)
A civilization which tends to concentrate wealth
and power in the hands of a fortunate few, and to make of
others mere human machines, must inevitably evolve
anarchy and bring destruction. But a civilization is
possible in which the poorest could have all the comforts
and conveniences now enjoyed by the rich; in which
prisons and almshouses would be needless, and charitable
societies unthought of. Such a civilization waits only
for the social intelligence that will adapt means to
ends. Powers that might give plenty to all are already in
our hands. Though there is poverty and want, there is,
yet, seeming embarrassment from the very excess of
wealth-producing forces. "Give us but a market," say
manufacturers, "and we will supply goods without end!"
"Give us but work!" cry idle men.
...
The progress of civilization requires that more
and more intelligence be devoted to social affairs, and
this not the intelligence of the few, but that of the
many. We cannot safely leave politics to politicians, or
political economy to college professors. The people
themselves must think, because the people alone can act.
...
There is a suggestive fact that must
impress any one who thinks over the history of past eras
and preceding civilizations. The great, wealthy and
powerful nations have always lost their freedom; it is only
in small, poor and isolated communities that Liberty has
been maintained. So true is this that the poets have always
sung that Liberty loves the rocks and tile mountains; that
she shrinks from wealth and power and splendor, from the
crowded city and the busy mart.
...
The mere growth of society involves danger of the
gradual conversion of government into something
independent of and beyond the people, and the gradual
seizure of its powers by a ruling class -- though not
necessarily a class marked off by personal titles and a
hereditary status, for, as history shows, personal titles
and hereditary status do not accompany the concentration
of power, but follow it. ...
But to the changes produced by growth are, with
us, added the changes brought about by improved
industrial methods. The tendency of steam and of
machinery is to the division of labor, to the
concentration of wealth and power.
...
It is not merely positively, but negatively, that
great aggregations of wealth, whether individual or
corporate, tend to corrupt government and take it out of
the control of the masses of the people. "Nothing is more
timorous than a million dollars -- except two million
dollars." Great wealth always supports the party in
power, no matter how corrupt it may be. It never exerts
itself for reform, for it instinctively fears change. It
never struggles against misgovemment. When threatened by
the holders of political power it does not agitate, nor
appeal to the people; it buys them off. It is in this
way, no less than by its direct interference, that
aggregated wealth corrupts government, and helps to make
politics a trade. Our organized lobbies, both legislative
and Congressional, rely as much upon the fears as upon
the hopes of moneyed interests. When "business" is dull,
their resource is to get up a bill which some moneyed
interest will pay them to beat. So, too, these large
moneyed interests will subscribe to political funds, on
the principle of keeping on the right side of those in
power, just as the railroad companies deadhead [transport
for free] President [Chester A.] Arthur when he goes to
Florida to fish.
The more corrupt a government the easier wealth
can use it. Where legislation is to be bought, the rich
make the laws; where justice is to be purchased, the rich
have the ear of the courts. And if, for this reason,
great wealth does not absolutely prefer corrupt
government to pure government, it becomes none the less a
corrupting influence. A community composed of very rich
and very poor falls an easy prey to whoever can seize
power. The very poor have not spirit and intelligence
enough to resist; the very rich have too much at
stake.
Developments in America
The rise in the United States of monstrous
fortunes, the aggregation of enormous wealth in the hands
of corporations, necessarily implies, the loss by the
people of governmental control. Democratic forms may be
maintained, but there can be as much tyranny and
misgovemment under democratic forms as any other -- in
fact, they lend themselves most readily to tyranny and
misgovernment. Forms count for little. The Romans
expelled their kings, and continued to abhor the very
name of king. But under the name of Caesars and
Imperators, that at first meant no more than our "Boss,"
they crouched before tyrants more absolute than kings. We
have already, under the popular name of "bosses,"
developed political Caesars in municipalities and states.
If this development continues, in time there will come a
national boss. We are young; but we are growing. The day
may arrive when the "Boss of America" will be to the
modem world what Caesar was to the Roman world. This, at
least, is certain: Democratic government
in more than name can exist only where wealth is
distributed with something like equality -- where the
great mass of citizens are personally free and
independent, neither fettered by their poverty nor made
subject by their wealth. There is, after all, some
sense in a property qualification. The man who is
dependent on a master for his living is not a free man.
To give the suffrage to slaves is only to give votes to
their owners. That universal suffrage may add to, instead
of decreasing, the political power of wealth we see when
mill-owners and mine operators vote their hands.
The freedom to earn, without fear or
favor, a comfortable living, ought to go with the freedom
to vote. Thus alone can a sound basis for
republican institutions be secured. How can a man be said
to have a country where he has no right to a square inch
of soil; where he has nothing but his hands, and, urged
by starvation, must bid against his fellows for the
privilege of using them? When it comes to voting tramps,
some principle has been carried to a ridiculous and
dangerous extreme. I have known elections to be decided
by the carting of paupers from the almshouse to the
polls. But such decisions can scarcely be in the interest
of good government.
Beneath all
political problems lies the social problem of the
distribution of wealth. This our people do not generally
recognize, and they listen to quacks who propose to cure
the symptoms without touching the disease. "Let us
elect good men to office," say the quacks. Yes; let us
catch little birds by sprinkling salt on their
tails!
People Losing Power
The people, of course, continue to vote; but the
people are losing their power. Money and organization
tell more and more in elections. In some sections bribery
has become chronic, and numbers of voters expect
regularly to sell their votes. In some sections large
employers regularly bulldoze their hands into voting as
they wish. In municipal, State and Federal politics the
power of the "machine" is increasing. In many places it
has become so strong that the ordinary citizen has no
more influence in the government under which he lives
than he would have in China. He is, in reality, not one
of the governing classes, but one of the governed.
He occasionally, in disgust, votes for
"the other man," or "the other party;" but, generally, to
find that he has effected only a change of masters, or
secured the same masters under different names. And he is
beginning to accept the situation, and to leave politics
to politicians, as something with which an honest,
self-respecting man cannot afford meddle.
...
As for the great railroad managers, they may well
say, "The people be d-d!" When they want
the power of the people they buy the people's
masters. The map of the United States is colored
to show States and Territories. A map of
real political powers would ignore State lines.
Here would be a big patch representing the domains of
Vanderbilt; there Jay Gould's dominions would be brightly
marked. In another place would be set off the empire of
Stanford and Huntington; in another the newer empire of
Henry Villard. The States and parts of States that own
the sway of the Pennsylvania Central would be
distinguished from those ruled by the Baltimore and Ohio;
and so on. In our National Senate,
sovereign members of the Union are supposed to be
represented; but what are more truly represented are
railroad longs and great moneyed interests, though
occasionally a mine jobber from Nevada or Colorado, not
inimical to the ruling powers, is suffered to buy himself
a seat for glory. And the Bench as well
as the Senate is being filled with corporation henchmen.
A railroad king makes his attorney a judge of last
resort, as the great lord used to make his chaplain a
bishop.... ...
Read the entire
article
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
I have already referred generally to the defects that
attach to all socialistic remedies for the evil condition
of labor, but respect for your Holiness dictates that I
should speak specifically, even though briefly, of the
remedies proposed or suggested by you.
Of these, the widest and strongest are that the state
should restrict the hours of labor, the employment of
women and children, the unsanitary conditions of
workshops, etc. Yet how little may in this way be
accomplished.
A strong, absolute ruler might hope by such
regulations to alleviate the conditions of chattel
slaves. But the tendency of our times is toward
democracy, and democratic states are necessarily weaker
in paternalism, while in the industrial slavery, growing
out of private ownership of land, that prevails in
Christendom today, it is not the master who forces the
slave to labor, but the slave who urges the master to let
him labor. Thus the greatest difficulty in
enforcing such regulations comes from those whom they are
intended to benefit. It is not, for instance, the masters
who make it difficult to enforce restrictions on child
labor in factories, but the mothers, who, prompted by
poverty, misrepresent the ages of their children even to
the masters, and teach the children to misrepresent.
But while in large factories and mines regulations as
to hours, ages, etc., though subject to evasion and
offering opportunities for extortion and corruption, may
be to some extent enforced, how can they have any effect
in those far wider branches of industry where the laborer
works for himself or for small employers?
All such remedies are of the nature of the remedy for
overcrowding that is generally prescribed with them
— the restriction under penalty of the number who
may occupy a room and the demolition of unsanitary
buildings. Since these measures have no tendency to
increase house accommodation or to augment ability to pay
for it, the overcrowding that is forced back in some
places goes on in other places and to a worse degree. All
such remedies begin at the wrong end. They are like
putting on brake and bit to hold in quietness horses that
are being lashed into frenzy; they are like trying to
stop a locomotive by holding its wheels instead of
shutting off steam; like attempting to cure smallpox by
driving back its pustules. Men do not overwork themselves
because they like it; it is not in the nature of the
mother’s heart to send children to work when they
ought to be at play; it is not of choice that laborers
will work under dangerous and unsanitary conditions.
These things, like overcrowding, come from the sting of
poverty. And so long as the poverty of which they are the
expression is left untouched, restrictions such as you
indorse can have only partial and evanescent results. The
cause remaining, repression in one place can only bring
out its effects in other places, and the task you assign
to the state is as hopeless as to ask it to lower the
level of the ocean by bailing out the sea.
Nor can the state cure poverty by regulating wages. It
is as much beyond the power of the state to regulate
wages as it is to regulate the rates of interest. Usury
laws have been tried again and again, but the only effect
they have ever had has been to increase what the poorer
borrowers must pay, and for the same reasons that all
attempts to lower by regulation the price of goods have
always resulted merely in increasing them. The general
rate of wages is fixed by the ease or difficulty with
which labor can obtain access to land, ranging from the
full earnings of labor, where land is free, to the least
on which laborers can live and reproduce, where land is
fully monopolized. Thus, where it has been comparatively
easy for laborers to get land, as in the United States
and in Australasia, wages have been higher than in Europe
and it has been impossible to get European laborers to
work there for wages that they would gladly accept at
home; while as monopolization goes on under the influence
of private property in land, wages tend to fall, and the
social conditions of Europe to appear. Thus, under the
partial yet substantial recognition of common rights to
land, of which I have spoken, the many attempts of the
British Parliament to reduce wages by regulation failed
utterly. And so, when the institution of private property
in land had done its work in England, all attempts of
Parliament to raise wages proved unavailing. In the
beginning of this century it was even attempted to
increase the earnings of laborers by grants in aid of
wages. But the only result was to lower commensurately
what wages employers paid.
The state could maintain wages above the tendency of
the market (for as I have shown labor deprived of land
becomes a commodity), only by offering employment to all
who wish it; or by lending its sanction to strikes and
supporting them with its funds. Thus it is, that the
thoroughgoing socialists who want the state to take all
industry into its hands are much more logical than those
timid socialists who propose that the state should
regulate private industry — but only a little.
The same hopelessness attends your suggestion that
working-people should be encouraged by the state in
obtaining a share of the land. It is evident that by this
you mean that, as is now being attempted in Ireland, the
state shall buy out large landowners in favor of small
ones, establishing what are known as peasant proprietors.
Supposing that this can be done even to a considerable
extent, what will be accomplished save to substitute a
larger privileged class for a smaller privileged class?
What will be done for the still larger class that must
remain, the laborers of the agricultural districts, the
workmen of the towns, the proletarians of the cities? Is
it not true, as Professor De Laveleye says, that in such
countries as Belgium, where peasant proprietary exists,
the tenants, for there still exist tenants, are
rack-rented with a mercilessness unknown in Ireland? Is
it not true that in such countries as Belgium the
condition of the mere laborer is even worse than it is in
Great Britain, where large ownerships obtain? And if the
state attempts to buy up land for peasant proprietors
will not the effect be, what is seen today in Ireland, to
increase the market value of land and thus make it more
difficult for those not so favored, and for those who
will come after, to get land? How, moreover, on the
principle which you declare (36), that “to the
state the interests of all are equal, whether high or
low,” will you justify state aid to one man to buy
a bit of land without also insisting on state aid to
another man to buy a donkey, to another to buy a shop, to
another to buy the tools and materials of a trade —
state aid in short to everybody who may be able to make
good use of it or thinks that he could? And are you not
thus landed in communism — not the communism of the
early Christians and of the religious orders, but
communism that uses the coercive power of the state to
take rightful property by force from those who have, to
give to those who have not? For the state has no purse of
Fortunatus; the state cannot repeat the miracle of the
loaves and fishes; all that the state can give, it must
get by some form or other of the taxing power. And
whether it gives or lends money, or gives or lends
credit, it cannot give to those who have not, without
taking from those who have.
But aside from all this, any scheme of dividing up
land while maintaining private property in land is
futile. Small holdings cannot coexist with the treatment
of land as private property where civilization is
materially advancing and wealth augments. We may see this
in the economic tendencies that in ancient times were the
main cause that transformed world-conquering Italy from a
land of small farms to a land of great estates. We may
see it in the fact that while two centuries ago the
majority of English farmers were owners of the land they
tilled, tenancy has been for a long time the all but
universal condition of the English farmer. And now the
mighty forces of steam and electricity have come to urge
concentration. It is in the United States that we may see
on the largest scale how their power is operating to turn
a nation of landowners into a nation of tenants. The
principle is clear and irresistible. Material progress
makes land more valuable, and when this increasing value
is left to private owners land must pass from the
ownership of the poor into the ownership of the rich,
just as diamonds so pass when poor men find them. What
the British government is attempting in Ireland is to
build snow-houses in the Arabian desert! to plant bananas
in Labrador!
There is one way, and only one way, in which
working-people in our civilization may be secured a share
in the land of their country, and that is the way that we
propose — the taking of the profits of
landownership for the community.
... read
the whole letter
Alanna Hartzok: Earth
Rights Democracy: Public Finance based on Early Christian
Teachings
Karl Williams:
Social Justice In
Australia: ADVANCED KIT
THE GREAT
PARADOX
For a long time an idea was turning over in his
head.
- Why are salaries in new countries always
higher than in old ones?
- Why do progress and poverty not only appear
together, but also drift farther and farther
apart?
- Why are public as well as private charity
impotent in solving the problem with any
permanence?
- Why do beggars, tramps and prostitutes cluster
around millionaires' districts?
In San Francisco he had seen the growth of
progress together with poverty. A trip to New York showed
him the process in its full maturity. The shocking
contrast between the most bare-faced opulence with the
most abject squalor turned into an obsession the need to
find an answer to the old question.
But he did not find that answer in New York. He
found it in San Francisco a few months later. During a
horse ride in the hills east of the city he dismounted to
let the animal rest. Just to start conversation he asked
a teamster what the value of land was in the district. "I
don't know," answered the man, "but there is a man over
there asking 1000 dollars for an acre." What was
happening "over there" for an acre of land to be worth a
fortune in the California of 1869?
The transcontinental railway was about to arrive.
The land value throughout Oakland was being catapulted to
the stars with speculators vying with each other to
secure land titles before the arrival of those who would
need land to live and work.
"EUREKA!"
In a flash, George understood. Land value
increases with the increase in population, and those who
needed land had to pay for the privilege of using it. But
the land is the primary source of all that human beings
need to live. If there is such a thing as a universal
right to life, there must also be a universal right to
the Global Commons necessary for life. He who owns ends
up controlling the destiny of him who works. Words like
"republicanism" or "democracy" may be high-sounding, but
empty.
The remedy suggests itself. To restore the control
of land to those who use it, it is enough to take the
rent of it as a social charge with which to defray public
expenditure. The rent of land, instead of ending up in
private pockets, would pay for defence, administration
and the social services. Put it another way, let whoever
occupies land pay in proportion to the quantity and
quality of value subtracted from the common resources of
nature, not for value added on them by his/her own
exertion. And let all receive the value of those
resources in the form of public services. Nobody would
thus be defrauded of the fruits of their labour, and the
load of taxation would cease to fall on
production.
There was nothing new in that
flash of understanding. He had independently arrived at
the conclusions of feudalism, of Quesnay and of Turgot,
without having ever heard of the three.
... Read the
entire article
Dave Wetzel: Justice or Injustice: The
Locational Benefit Levy
We
all have our own personal interpretation of how
“justice” can be achieved.
Often “justice” is interpreted in a
very narrow legal sense and only in reference to the
judicial system, which has been designed to protect the
status quo. ...
Of course, all citizens (and subjects in the UK)
-- need to know exactly what are the legal boundaries
within which society operates.
But, supposing those original rules are unfair and
unjust. Then the legal framework, being used to
perpetuate an injustice -- does not make that injustice
moral and proper even if within the rules of
jurisprudence it is “legal.”
Obvious examples of this dislocation between
immoral laws and natural justice is
- South Africa's former policy of
apartheid;
- the USA's former segregated schools and
buses;
- discrimination based on race, religion,
disability or sex;
- slavery;
- the oppression of women;
- Victorian Britain's use of child labour and
colonialism.
All these policies were
“lawful” according to the legal framework of
their day but that veneer of legality did not make these
policies righteous and just.
Any society built on a basis of injustice will be
burdened down with its own predisposition towards
self-destruction. Even the most suppressed people will
one-day, demand justice, rise up and overthrow their
oppressors.
Human survival demands justice. Wherever slavery
or dictatorship has been installed -- eventually, justice
has triumphed and a more democratic and fairer system has
replaced it. It is safe to predict that wherever slavery
or dictatorship exists today -- it will be superseded by
a fairer and more just system.
Similarly, let's consider our
distribution of natural resources.
By definition, natural resources are not made by
human effort. Our planet offers every inhabitant a bounty
-- an amazing treasure chest of wealth that can supply
our needs for food, shelter and every aspect for our
survival.
Surely, “justice”
demands that this natural wealth should be equally
available to all and that nobody should starve, be
homeless or suffer poverty simply because they are
excluded from tapping in to this enormous wealth that
nature has provided. ...
If our whole economy, with the
private possession of land and other natural resources,
is built upon an injustice -- then can any of us really
be surprised that we continue to live on a planet where
wars predominate, intolerance is common, crime is rife
and where poverty and starvation is the norm for a huge
percentage of earth's population.
Is this inherited system really the best we can
do?
There must be a method for fairly utilising the
earth's natural resources.
Referring to the rebuilding of
Iraq in his recent speech to the American Congress, Tony
Blair stated “We promised Iraq democratic
Government. We will deliver it. We promised them the
chance to use their oil wealth to build prosperity for
all their citizens, not a corrupt elite. We will do
so”.
Thus, Tony Blair recognises the difference between
political justice in the form of a democratic Government
and economic justice in the form of sharing natural
resources.
We have not heard any dissenting voice from this
promise to share Iraq's natural oil wealth for all the
people of Iraq to enjoy the benefits. But if it is so obviously right and proper for the
Iraqi people to share their natural wealth – why is
it not the practice to do the same in all
nations?
No landowner can create land values. If this were
the case, then an entrepreurial landowner in the Scottish
Highlands would be able to create more value than an
indolent landowner in the City of London.
No, land values arise because of natural
advantages (eg fertility for agricultural land or
approximity to ports or harbours for commercial sites) or
because of the efforts of the whole community -- past and
present investment by both the public and private
sectors, and the activities of individuals all give rise
to land values. Why do we not advocate
the sharing of these land values, which are as much a
gift of nature and probably in most western economies are
worth much more than Iraqi oil?
One solution would be to introduce a Location Benefit Levy, where each site is
valued, based on its optimum permitted use and a levy is
applied – a similar method to Britain's commercial
rates on buildings but based soley on the land value and
ignoring the condition of the building.
The outcome of this policy would be to give all
citizens a share in the natural wealth of the nation.
...
It is an injustice that landowners can speculate
on empty sites, denying their use for jobs or
homes.
It is an injustice that a factory owner can sack
all their workers, smash the roof of their building to
let in the rain and be rewarded with elimination of their
rates bill.
It is an injustice that the poorest residents pay
the highest share of their incomes in Council
Tax.
It is an injustice that people are denied their
share of the earth's resources.
The Location Benefit Levy is a simple way to start
addressing the world's last great injustice.
Read
the whole article
Mason Gaffney: Sounding the Revenue
Potential of Land: Fifteen Lost Elements
Multiplier effect of taxing
absentee owners to spend funds locally
Transferring rents from absentees to be spent locally
improves the State economic base and balance of payments
(except to the extent the State outsources its work).
Focusing taxes on land means absentees cannot remove the
tax base from our state. The worst they can do is sell it
to residents, thus raising the quality of life.
California's legislative analyst,
William Hamm, estimated in 1978 that over fifty per cent
of the value of taxable property in California was owned
by residents of other states or nations. The
potential impact of this factor is
enormous.
There is a curious silence on the matter. When it
comes to discriminating against immigrant workers,
xenophobia fills the air. There is a hue and cry against
outsourcing. Taxing alien property, however, pushes a
different button. Yet, here is one instance where
localism may be harnessed to help create a more healthy
society. The purpose of democracy is to represent
the electorate, not the absentee who stands between the
resident and the resources of his homeland
Read the whole
article
Weld Carter: A
Clarion Call to Sanity, to Honesty, to Justice
Our problem today, as yesterday, and the days before,
back to the earliest recorded times, is POVERTY.
There are times when this problem is lesser. We call
these "booms." There are also times when the problem is
greatly exacerbated. These are called "busts." But, as
the Bible says, "the poor have ye always with ye."
The purpose of this paper is to explore the core of
the problem. It is not the position that there is only
one single error afoot in our social organizations. There
may be several, there may be only a few things to remedy.
The position is, as stated earlier, that there is one
basic cause of the problem. Therefore, the removal of
this one basic error is the first, the primary step, for
the simple reason that, until this basic social evil is
eradicated, no other reform will avail. We will simply
continue the boom and bust cycles until the economies of
the whole world are wrecked by inflation or by a nuclear
war triggered by the ongoing economic disaster.
Let us begin this study of the likely causes of our
troubles by asking two questions:
- Are we over-populated?
- Are the earth's resources inadequate for this
population?
Our stage, of course, for making this study will be
this world of ours, for it is upon this world that the
drama of human living is played out, with all its joys
and all its sorrows, with all its great achievements and
all its failures, with all its nobilities and all its
wickedness.
Regardless of its size relative to other planets, with
its circumference of about twenty-five thousand miles, to
any mere mortal who must walk to the station and back
each day, it is huge. Roughly ninety-six million miles
separate the sun from the earth on the latter's eliptical
journey around the sun. At this distance, the earth makes
its annual journey in its elliptical curve and it spins
on its own canted axis. Because of this cant, the sun's
rays are distributed far more evenly, thus minimizing
their damage and maximizing their benefits.
Consider the complementarity of nature in the case of
the two forms of life we call vegetable and animal, in
their respective uses of the two gases, oxygen and carbon
dioxide, the waste product of each serving as the
life-giving force of the other. Any increase in the one
will encourage a like response in the other.
Marvel at the manner in which nature, with no help
from man or beast, delivers pure water to the highest
lands, increasing it as to their elevation, thus
affording us a free ride downstream and free power as we
desire it. Look with awe at the variety and quantity of
minerals with which this world is blessed, and finally at
the fecundity nature has bestowed so lavishly throughout
both animal and vegetable life: Take note of the number
of corn kernels from a single stalk that can be grown
next year from a single kernel of this year's crop; then
think of the vastly greater yields from a single cherry
pit or the seeds of a single apple, or grape or
watermelon; or, turning to the animal world, consider the
hen who averages almost an egg a day and the spawning
fish as examples of the prolificacy that is evident
throughout the whole of the animal world, including
mankind.
If this marvelous earth is as rich in resources as
portrayed in the foregoing paragraph, then the problem
must be one of distribution:
- how is the land distributed among the earth's
inhabitants, and
- how are its products in turn distributed?
Land is universally treated as either public property
or private property. Wars are fought over land. Nowhere
is it treated as common property.
George has described this world as a "well-provisioned
ship" and when one considers the increasingly huge daily
withdrawals of such provisions as coal and petroleum as
have occurred say over the past one hundred years, one
must but agree with this writer. But this is only a
static view. Consider the suggestion of some ten years
ago that it would require the conversion of less than 20%
the of the current annual growth of wood into alcohol to
fuel all the motors then being fueled by the
then-conventional means. The dynamic picture of the
future is indeed awesome, and there is every indication
that that characteristic has the potential of endless
expansion. So how is it that on so richly endowed a
Garden of Eden as this world of ours we have only been
able to make of it a hell on earth for vast numbers of
people?
The answers are simple: we have permitted, nay
we have even more than that, encouraged, the gross
misallocation of resources and a viciously wicked
distribution of wealth, and we choose to be governed by
those whom we, in our ignorance, have elected.
... read the whole
essay
Jeff Smith: Sharing
Natural Rents to Sustain Human Society
Rent rewarding eco-sense
Now wipe out the taxes, subsidies, liability limits,
and rent retention. Instead, replace all that with
running government like a business. Charge full-market
value for state acknowledgements (the seven secret
subsidies):
- corporate charters,
- standards waivers,
- utility franchises,
- monopoly patents,
|
- communication licenses,
- resource leases/claims, and
- land titles/deeds
|
Collecting rent for government-granted privileges would
not only raise trillions but also whittle corporations
down to a competitive size, less hazardous to
democracy.
Besides charging what privileges are worth, government
should also replace license with responsibility
("internalize the externalities"). To temper the
temptation to use lands both fragile and valuable,
society could impose surcharges - an Ecology Security
Deposit, Restoration Insurance, Emission Permits, and
fines when users exceed standards. To minimize all these
charges, producers would seek sustainable alternatives.
Getting and sharing rent from land titles is the
centerpiece of this geonomic revenue reform. Each phase
of such a revenue shift motivates sustainable choices in
its own way.
1. Get the rent. Having to pay over rent to
community makes speculation not worth the bother. So
owners use their land and resources more efficiently.
Using some land more intensely means using other land
not at all. Plus, intense use augments the housing
stock, lowering the housing cost. Pittsburgh, while
taxing land six times more than buildings, enjoyed the
most affordable housing of any major US city. More
residents are owner occupants who choose to improve
their homes, plugging heat leaks, etc.
2. De-tax wages and interest. Removing such
taxes while collecting rent moves investment funds in
the opposite direction, from extraction and speculation
into advancing physical capital and hyper-training
labor. The resultant investment shift would accelerate
techno-progress, helping us get more from less.
3. De-subsidize favored producers. Besides
giving lobbyists a reason to contemplate a career
change, abolishing subsidies would force producers to
cut waste, to call on all the tools and techniques
extolled by Amory Lovins and other green
industrialists.
4. Pay out the rent. Getting money for
nothing, would people still pursue mindless consumption
of goodies or switch to mindful consumption of leisure?
The pressure to consume stuff for prestige should be
lessened by the increased equality in society. Everyone
would pay in land dues equal to the value of the nature
they claim and get back rent dividends equal to
everyone else. These dues and dividends would narrow
the income gap.
The conserver ethic would have a context in which to
grow, since community is the crucible for morality.
Stable neighborhoods put Pittsburgh's crime rate on par
with a small town, by far the lowest in the US. Where
residents become owner occupants, they participate more
in community, even adopt environmental values. Pittsburgh
converted its most valuable location, where the three
rivers meet, into a public park. Not bad for a working
class town twice named America's Most Livable. . ..
read
the whole article
Judge Samuel Seabury: An Address delivered upon the
100th anniversary of the birth of Henry George
WE are met to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the
birth of Henry George. We meet, therefore, in a spirit of
joy and thanksgiving for the great life which he devoted
to the service of humanity. To very few of the children
of men is it given to act the part of a great teacher who
makes an outstanding contribution toward revealing the
basic principles to which human society must adhere if it
is to walk in the way which leads to freedom. This Henry
George did, and in so doing he expressed himself with a
clarity of thought and diction which has rarely been
surpassed. ...
The most serious threat to democracy which exists is
that the democracies themselves have not as yet achieved
social justice for their own people. If they would
achieve it, they would have nothing to fear from the
dictatorship states. In this country we have
approximately eleven million unemployed and are now in
the tenth year of an acute economic depression. We
certainly cannot claim to have achieved social justice.
True, we offer many advantages over what the despotisms
offer, but in any country people will submit to
regimentation and political and social despotism rather
than go without food and shelter. In such circumstances,
ignorant of the value of the liberty they surrender, they
will sell their birthright for a mess of pottage.
,,, The second principle to which I wish to refer is
Henry George's advocacy of freedom of trade among the
nations — not free trade introduced overnight, but
freedom of trade as an end toward which the nations
should move. When he wrote his great work on "Protection
or Free Trade," he demolished the protectionist argument
and in chapter after chapter he showed the absurdities to
which the protectionist principle led if carried to its
logical conclusion. But even he, penetrating as his
vision was, could not foresee that mankind was heading
for a world order of economic nationalism and isolation,
based upon the principle of protection carried to its
utmost extreme. And yet that it is precisely the doctrine
which is now currently accepted. If it becomes general,
it can serve only to sow the seeds of destruction of that
measure of civilization which we now have and force a
lowering of the standard of living throughout the
world.
There are two ways by which the people of one nation
can acquire the property or goods of the people of
another nation. These are by war and by trade. There are
no other methods. The present tendency among civilized
people to outlaw trade must drive the states which
prescribe such outlawry to acquire the property and goods
of other peoples by war. Early in man's struggle for
existence the resort to war was the common method
adopted. With the advancement of civilization men
resorted to trade as a practical substitute for war. The
masses of men wish to trade with one another. The action
of the states alone prevents them from so doing. In
prohibiting trade, the state gives an importance to
territorial boundaries which would not exist if freedom
of trade existed. In accentuating the importance of mere
boundary disputes, rather than assuring the right of
peoples to trade with one another, the nations put the
emphasis upon the precise issue which is, itself, one of
the most prolific causes of war.
All the great modern states are turning away from
freedom of trade, and indeed, from trade itself, and
forbidding their people the right to earn their own
livelihood and to associate freely with one another in
industry. In order to accomplish this end they are
compelled to regiment the lives of their people under
state bureaucracies and this can be accomplished only by
a despotic state. If the powers of the modern states are
to be augmented by conferring upon them the right to run
all industry, despotism is inevitable. A dictator may, by
reducing the standard of living and regimenting the
people, run all industry within the state over which he
rules, but a democracy, which, if it is to be true to
itself, must preserve individual initiative, can not do
so without transforming itself into a dictatorship. ...
read the whole
speech
|
To share this page with a friend:
right click, choose "send," and add your
comments.
|
|
Red links have not been
visited; .
Green links are pages you've seen
|
Essential Documents pertinent
to this theme:
|
|