Our most important documents say that ours is a nation
dedicated to the proposition that all of us are created
equal.
When that assertion was first made, a large number of
us were enslaved, and their descendants would be enslaved
for another 80 years. But in some important ways, we have
not yet created genuine equality of opportunity for all.
Who one chooses for one's parents is the prime
determinant of one's opportunities.
Conservatives might say that it isn't appropriate for
government to intervene in any way, that we as a society
don't owe children an equal shot if their parents can't
provide it.
Liberals might try to apply patches to help at least
some of those who are born in underprivileged
circumstances to have some of what middle-class and
upper-class children have, but the number of patches
needed is increasingly large and expensive.
Is there another answer? Georgists think so.
Henry George: Thy Kingdom
Come (1889 speech)
... The story goes on to describe how the roads of
heaven, the streets of the New Jerusalem, were filled
with disconsolate tramp angels, who had pawned their
wings, and were outcasts in Heaven itself.
You laugh, and it is ridiculous. But
there is a moral in it that is worth serious thought. Is it
not ridiculous to imagine the application to God’s
heaven of the same rules of division that we apply to
God’s earth, even while we pray that His will may be
done on earth as it is done in Heaven?
Really, if we could imagine it, it is
impossible to think of heaven treated as we treat this
earth, without seeing that, no matter how salubrious were
its air, no matter how bright the light that filled it, no
matter how magnificent its vegetable growth, there would be
poverty, and suffering, and a division of classes in heaven
itself, if heaven were parcelled out as we have parceled
out the earth. And, conversely, if people were to act
towards each other as we must suppose the inhabitants of
heaven to do, would not this earth be a very
heaven?
“Thy kingdom come.” No one
can think of the kingdom for which the prayer asks without
feeling that it must be a kingdom of justice and equality
— not necessarily of equality in condition, but of
equality in opportunity. And no one can think of it without
seeing that a very kingdom of God might be brought on this
earth if people would but seek to do justice — if
people would but acknowledge the essential principle of
Christianity, that of doing to others as we would have
others do to us, and of recognising that
we are all here equally the children of the one Father,
equally entitled to share His bounty, equally entitled to
live our lives and develop our faculties, and to apply our
labour to the raw material that He has provided.
...
Nothing is clearer than that if we are
all children of the universal Father, we are all entitled
to the use of His bounty. No one dare deny that
proposition. But the people who set their faces against its
carrying out say, virtually: “Oh, yes! that is true;
but it is impracticable to carry it into effect!”
Just think of what this means. This is God’s world,
and yet such people say that it is a world in which
God’s justice, God’s will, cannot be carried
into effect. What a monstrous absurdity, what a monstrous
blasphemy!
If the loving God does reign, if His
laws are the laws not merely of the physical, but of the
moral universe, there must be a way of carrying His will
into effect, there must be a way of doing equal justice to
all of His creatures.
There is. The people who deny that
there is any practical way of carrying into effect the
perception that all human beings are equally children of
the Creator shut their eyes to the plain and obvious way.
It is, of course, impossible in a civilisation like this of
ours to divide land up into equal pieces. Such a system
might have done in a primitive state of society. We have
progressed in civilisation beyond such rude devices, but we
have not, nor can we, progress beyond God’s
providence.
There is a way of securing the equal
rights of all, not by dividing land up into equal pieces,
but by taking for the use of all that value which attaches
to land, not as the result of individual labour upon it,
but as the result of the increase in population, and the
improvement of society. In that way everyone would be
equally interested in the land of one’s native
country. Here is the simple way. It is a way that impresses
the person who really sees its beauty with a more vivid
idea of the beneficence of the providence of the All-Father
than, it seems to me, does anything else. ... Read the whole
speech 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, and
must 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! Whatever benefit would accrue would be but
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.
...
But if, while there
is yet time, we turn to Justice and obey her, if we trust
Liberty and follow her, the dangers that now threaten must
disappear, the forces that now menace will turn to agencies
of elevation. Think of the powers now wasted; of the
infinite fields of knowledge yet to be explored; of the
possibilities of which the wondrous inventions of this
century give us but a hint. With want destroyed; with greed
changed to noble passions; with the fraternity that is born
of equality taking the place of the jealousy and fear that
now array men against each other; with mental power loosed
by conditions that give to the humblest comfort and
leisure; and who shall measure the heights to which our
civilization may soar? Words fail the thought! It is the
Golden Age of which poets have sung and high-raised seers
have told in metaphor! It is the glorious vision which has
always haunted man with gleams of fitful splendor. It is
what he saw whose eyes at Patmos were closed in a trance.
It is the culmination of Christianity — the City of
God on earth, with its walls of jasper and its gates of
pearl! It is the reign of the Prince of Peace! ...
read
the whole speech
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
For refusal to take for public purposes the increasing
values that attach to land with social growth is to
necessitate the getting of public revenues by taxes that
lessen production, distort distribution and corrupt
society. It is to leave some to take what justly belongs
to all; it is to forego the only means by which it is
possible in an advanced civilization to combine the
security of possession that is necessary to improvement
with the equality of natural opportunity that is the most
important of all natural rights. It is thus at the basis
of all social life to set up an unjust inequality between
man and man, compelling some to pay others for the
privilege of living, for the chance of working, for the
advantages of civilization, for the gifts of their God.
But it is even more than this. The very robbery that the
masses of men thus suffer gives rise in advancing
communities to a new robbery. For the value that with the
increase of population and social advance attaches to
land being suffered to go to individuals who have secured
ownership of the land, it prompts to a forestalling of
and speculation in land wherever there is any prospect of
advancing population or of coming improvement, thus
producing an artificial scarcity of the natural elements
of life and labor, and a strangulation of production that
shows itself in recurring spasms of industrial depression
as disastrous to the world as destructive wars. It is
this that is driving men from the old countries to the
new countries, only to bring there the same curses. It is
this that causes our material advance not merely to fail
to improve the condition of the mere worker, but to make
the condition of large classes positively worse. It is
this that in our richest Christian countries is giving us
a large population whose lives are harder, more hopeless,
more degraded than those of the veriest savages. It is
this that leads so many men to think that God is a
bungler and is constantly bringing more people into his
world than he has made provision for; or that there is no
God, and that belief in him is a superstition which the
facts of life and the advance of science are
dispelling.
The darkness in light, the weakness in strength, the
poverty amid wealth, the seething discontent foreboding
civil strife, that characterize our civilization of
today, are the natural, the inevitable results of our
rejection of God’s beneficence, of our ignoring of
his intent. Were we on the other hand to follow his
clear, simple rule of right, leaving scrupulously to the
individual all that individual labor produces, and taking
for the community the value that attaches to land by the
growth of the community itself, not merely could evil
modes of raising public revenues be dispensed with, but
all men would be placed on an equal level of
opportunity with regard to the bounty of their Creator,
on an equal level of opportunity to exert their labor and
to enjoy its fruits. And then, without drastic
or restrictive measures the forestalling of land would
cease. For then the possession of land would mean only
security for the permanence of its use, and there would
be no object for any one to get land or to keep land
except for use; nor would his possession of better land
than others had confer any unjust advantage on him, or
unjust deprivation on them, since the equivalent of the
advantage would be taken by the state for the benefit of
all. ...
Your use, in so many passages of your Encyclical, of
the inclusive term “property” or
“private” property, of which in morals
nothing can be either affirmed or denied, makes your
meaning, if we take isolated sentences, in many places
ambiguous. But reading it as a whole, there can be no
doubt of your intention that private property in land
shall be understood when you speak merely of private
property. With this interpretation, I find that the
reasons you urge for private property in land are eight.
Let us consider them in order of presentation. You
urge:
1. That what is bought with rightful property is
rightful property. (RN, paragraph 5) ...
2. That private property in land proceeds from
man’s gift of reason. (RN, paragraphs 6-7.)
...
3. That private property in land deprives no one of the
use of land. (RN, paragraph 8.) ...
4. That Industry expended on land gives ownership in the
land itself. (RN, paragraphs 9-10.) ...
5. That private property in land has the support of the
common opinion of mankind, and has conduced to peace and
tranquillity, and that it is sanctioned by Divine Law.
(RN, paragraph 11.) ...
6. That fathers should provide for their children and
that private property in land is necessary to enable them
to do so. (RN, paragraphs 14-17.) ...
7. That the private ownership of land stimulates
industry, increases wealth, and attaches men to the soil
and to their country. (RN, paragraph 51.) ...
8. That the right to possess private property in land is
from nature, not from man; that the state has no right to
abolish it, and that to take the value of landownership
in taxation would be unjust and cruel to the private
owner. (RN, paragraph 51.) ...
2. That private property in land proceeds from
man’s gift of reason. (6-7.)
In the second place your Holiness argues that man
possessing reason and forethought may not only acquire
ownership of the fruits of the earth, but also of the
earth itself, so that out of its products he may make
provision for the future.
Reason, with its attendant forethought, is indeed the
distinguishing attribute of man; that which raises him
above the brute, and shows, as the Scriptures declare,
that he is created in the likeness of God. And this gift
of reason does, as your Holiness points out, involve the
need and right of private property in whatever is
produced by the exertion of reason and its attendant
forethought, as well as in what is produced by physical
labor. In truth, these elements of man’s production
are inseparable, and labor involves the use of reason. It
is by his reason that man differs from the animals in
being a producer, and in this sense a maker. Of
themselves his physical powers are slight, forming as it
were but the connection by which the mind takes hold of
material things, so as to utilize to its will the matter
and forces of nature. It is mind, the intelligent reason,
that is the prime mover in labor, the essential agent in
production.
The right of private ownership does therefore
indisputably attach to things provided by man’s
reason and forethought. But it cannot attach to things
provided by the reason and forethought of God!
To illustrate: Let us suppose a company traveling
through the desert as the Israelites traveled from Egypt.
Such of them as had the forethought to provide themselves
with vessels of water would acquire a just right of
property in the water so carried, and in the thirst of
the waterless desert those who had neglected to provide
themselves, though they might ask water from the
provident in charity, could not demand it in right. For
while water itself is of the providence of God, the
presence of this water in such vessels, at such place,
results from the providence of the men who carried it.
Thus they have to it an exclusive right.
But suppose others use their forethought in pushing
ahead and appropriating the springs, refusing when their
fellows come up to let them drink of the water save as
they buy it of them. Would such forethought give any
right?
Your Holiness, it is not the forethought of carrying
water where it is needed, but the forethought of seizing
springs, that you seek to defend in defending the private
ownership of land!
Let me show this more fully, since it may be worth
while to meet those who say that if private property in
land be not just, then private property in the products
of labor is not just, as the material of these products
is taken from land. It will be seen on consideration that
all of man’s production is analogous to such
transportation of water as we have supposed. In growing
grain, or smelting metals, or building houses, or weaving
cloth, or doing any of the things that constitute
producing, all that man does is to change in place or
form preexisting matter. As a producer man is merely a
changer, not a creator; God alone creates. And since the
changes in which man’s production consists inhere
in matter so long as they persist, the right of private
ownership attaches the accident to the essence, and gives
the right of ownership in that natural material in which
the labor of production is embodied. Thus water, which in
its original form and place is the common gift of God to
all men, when drawn from its natural reservoir and
brought into the desert, passes rightfully into the
ownership of the individual who by changing its place has
produced it there.
But such right of ownership is in reality a mere right
of temporary possession. For though man may take material
from the storehouse of nature and change it in place or
form to suit his desires, yet from the moment he takes
it, it tends back to that storehouse again. Wood decays,
iron rusts, stone disintegrates and is displaced, while
of more perishable products, some will last for only a
few months, others for only a few days, and some
disappear immediately on use. Though, so far as we can
see, matter is eternal and force forever persists; though
we can neither annihilate nor create the tiniest mote
that floats in a sunbeam or the faintest impulse that
stirs a leaf, yet in the ceaseless flux of nature,
man’s work of moving and combining constantly
passes away. Thus the recognition of the ownership of
what natural material is embodied in the products of man
never constitutes more than temporary possession —
never interferes with the reservoir provided for all. As
taking water from one place and carrying it to another
place by no means lessens the store of water, since
whether it is drunk or spilled or left to evaporate, it
must return again to the natural reservoirs — so is
it with all things on which man in production can lay the
impress of his labor.
Hence, when you say that man’s reason puts it
within his right to have in stable and permanent
possession not only things that perish in the using, but
also those that remain for use in the future, you are
right in so far as you may include such things as
buildings, which with repair will last for generations,
with such things as food or fire-wood, which are
destroyed in the use. But when you infer that man can
have private ownership in those permanent things of
nature that are the reservoirs from which all must draw,
you are clearly wrong. Man may indeed hold in private
ownership the fruits of the earth produced by his labor,
since they lose in time the impress of that labor, and
pass again into the natural reservoirs from which they
were taken, and thus the ownership of them by one works
no injury to others. But he cannot so own the earth
itself, for that is the reservoir from which must
constantly be drawn not only the material with which
alone men can produce, but even their very bodies.
The conclusive reason why man cannot claim ownership
in the earth itself as he can in the fruits that he by
labor brings forth from it, is in the facts stated by you
in the very next paragraph (7), when you truly say:
Man’s needs do not die out, but recur;
satisfied today, they demand new supplies tomorrow.
Nature, therefore, owes to man a storehouse that shall
never fail, the daily supply of his daily wants. And
this he finds only in the inexhaustible fertility of
the earth.
By man you mean all men. Can what nature owes to all
men be made the private property of some men, from which
they may debar all other men?
Let me dwell on the words of your Holiness,
“Nature, therefore, owes to man a storehouse that
shall never fail.” By Nature you mean God. Thus
your thought, that in creating us, God himself has
incurred an obligation to provide us with a storehouse
that shall never fail, is the same as is thus expressed
and carried to its irresistible conclusion by the Bishop
of Meath:
God was perfectly free in the act by which He
created us; but having created us he bound himself by
that act to provide us with the means necessary for our
subsistence. The land is the only source of this kind
now known to us. The land, therefore, of every country
is the common property of the people of that country,
because its real owner, the Creator who made it, has
transferred it as a voluntary gift to them.
“Terram autem dedit filiis
hominum.” Now, as every individual in that
country is a creature and child of God, and as all his
creatures are equal in his sight, any settlement of the
land of a country that would exclude the humblest man
in that country from his share of the common
inheritance would be not only an injustice and a wrong
to that man, but, moreover, be AN IMPIOUS RESISTANCE TO
THE BENEVOLENT INTENTIONS OF HIS CREATOR. ...
Men who are sure of getting food when they shall need
it eat only what appetite dictates. But with the sparse
tribes who exist on the verge of the habitable globe life
is either a famine or a feast. Enduring hunger for days,
the fear of it prompts them to gorge like anacondas when
successful in their quest of game. And so, what gives
wealth its curse is what drives men to seek it, what
makes it so envied and admired — the fear of want.
As the unduly rich are the corollary of the unduly poor,
so is the soul-destroying quality of riches but the
reflex of the want that embrutes and degrades. The real
evil lies in the injustice from which unnatural
possession and unnatural deprivation both spring.
But this injustice can hardly be charged on
individuals or classes. The existence of private property
in land is a great social wrong from which society at
large suffers, and of which the very rich and the very
poor are alike victims, though at the opposite extremes.
Seeing this, it seems to us like a violation of Christian
charity to speak of the rich as though they individually
were responsible for the sufferings of the poor. Yet,
while you do this, you insist that the cause of monstrous
wealth and degrading poverty shall not be touched. Here
is a man with a disfiguring and dangerous excrescence.
One physician would kindly, gently, but firmly remove it.
Another insists that it shall not be removed, but at the
same time holds up the poor victim to hatred and
ridicule. Which is right?
In seeking to restore all men to their equal and
natural rights we do not seek the benefit of any class,
but of all. For we both know by faith and see by fact
that injustice can profit no one and that justice must
benefit all. ... read the whole
letter
Henry George:
The Wages of Labor
It cannot be, as is said by some, 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 others 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 bounties of the Creator, and to
each the full ownership of the products of his
labor.
Nor do we hesitate to say that this
way of securing the equal right to the bounty of the
Creator, and the exclusive right to the products of labor,
is the way intended by God for raising Public Revenue.
...
read the whole
article
Thomas Flavin, writing in The
Iconoclast, 1897
Now, it is quite true that all taxes of whatever
nature are paid out of the products of labor. But must
they be for that reason a tax on labor products. Let us
see.
I suppose you won't deny that a unit of labor applies
to different kinds of land will give very different
results. Suppose that a unit of labor produces on A's
land 4, on B's 3, on C's 2 and on D's 1. A's land is the
most, and D's is the least, productive land in use in the
community to which they belong. B's and C's represent
intermediate grades. Suppose each occupies the best land
that was open to him when he entered into possession.
Now, B, and C, and D have just as good a right to the use
of the best land as A had.
Manifestly then, if this be the whole story, there
cannot be equality of opportunity where a unit of labor
produces such different results, all other things being
equal except the land.
How is this equality to be secured? There is but one
possible way. Each must surrender for the common use of
all, himself included, whatever advantages accrues to him
from the possession of land superior to that which falls
to the lot of him who occupies the poorest.
In the case stated, what the unit of labor produces
for D, is what it should produce for A, B and C, if these
are not to have an advantage of natural opportunity over
D.
Hence equity is secured when A pays 3, B, 2 and C, 1
into a common fund for the common use of all — to
be expended, say in digging a well, making a road or
bridge, building a school, or other public utility.
Is it not manifest that here the tax which A, B and C
pay into a common fund, and from which D is exempt, is
not a tax on their labor products (though paid out of
them) but a tax on the superior advantage which they
enjoy over D, and to which D has just as good a right as
any of them.
The result of this arrangement is that each takes up
as much of the best land open to him as he can put to
gainful use, and what he cannot so use he leaves open for
the next. Moreover, he is at no disadvantage with the
rest who have come in ahead of him, for they provide for
him, in proportion to their respective advantages, those
public utilities which invariably arise wherever men live
in communities. Of course he will in turn hold to those
who come later the same relation that those who came
earlier held to him.
Suppose now that taxes had been levied on labor
products instead of land; all that any land-holder would
have to do to avoid the tax is to produce little or
nothing. He could just squat on his land, neither using
it himself nor letting others use it, but he would not
stop at this, for he would grab to the last acre all that
he could possibly get hold of. Each of the others would
do the same in turn, with the sure result that by and by,
E, F and G would find no land left for them on which they
might make a living.
So they would have to hire their labor to those who
had already monopolized the land, or else buy or rent a
piece of land from them. Behold now the devil of
landlordism getting his hoof on God's handiwork! Exit
justice, freedom, social peace and plenty. Enter robbery,
slavery, social discontent, consuming grief, riotous but
unearned wealth, degrading pauperism, crime breeding,
want, the beggar's whine, and the tyrant's iron heel.
And how did it all come about? By the simple
expedient of taxing labor products in order that precious
landlordism might laugh and grow fat on the bovine
stupidity of the community that contributes its own land
values toward its own enslavement!
And yet men vacuously ask, "What difference does it
make?"
O tempora! O mores! To be as plain as is necessary, it
makes this four-fold difference.
- First, it robs the community of its land
values;
- second, it robs labor of its wages in the name of
taxation;
- third, it sustains and fosters landlordism, a most
conspicuously damnable difference;
- fourth, it exhibits willing workers in enforced
idleness; beholding their families in want on the one
hand, and unused land that would yield them abundance
on the other.
This last is a difference that cries to heaven for
vengeance, and if it does not always cry in vain, will W.
C. Brann be able to draw his robe close around him and
with a good conscience exclaim, "It's none of my fault; I
am not my brother's keeper."
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural
Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation
(1917)
Q30. How would the single tax increase
wages?
A. By gradually transferring to wages that portion of the
current wealth that now flows to privilege. In other
words, it would widen and deepen the channel of wages by
enlarging opportunities for labor, and by increasing the
purchasing power of nominal wages through reduction of
prices. On the other hand it would narrow the channel of
privilege by making the man who has a privilege pay for
it.
Q31. How can this transfer be effected?
A. By the taxation of privilege.
Q32. How much ultimately may wages be thus
increased?
A. Fifty percent would be a low estimate.
Q33. What are fair prices and fair
wages?
A. Prices unenhanced by privilege, and wages undiminished
by taxation.
... read
the whole article
Martin Luther King, Jr: Where Do We
Go From Here? (1967)
I am now convinced that the simplest approach will
prove to be the most effective -- the solution to poverty
is to abolish it directly by a now widely discussed
measure: the guaranteed income. ...
John Kenneth Galbraith has estimated that $20 billion
a year would effect a guaranteed income, which he
describes as "not much more than we will spend the next
fiscal year to rescue freedom and democracy and religious
liberty as these are defined by 'experts' in
Vietnam."
The contemporary tendency in our society is to base
our distribution on scarcity, which has vanished, and to
compress our abundance into the overfed mouths of the
middle and upper classes until they gag with superfluity.
If democracy is to have breadth of meaning, it is
necessary to adjust this inequity. It is not only moral,
but it is also intelligent. We are wasting and degrading
human life by clinging to archaic thinking. ... read the
book excerpt and whole speech
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