God's Eldest Sons
We hold these truths to be self-evident ... But our
formalized relationship to something we all need —
land and the gifts of nature — makes a mockery of
those proud words. We allow those who claim title to land
to also claim the land rent as their own. We needn't
disturb title to correct this; we merely need to start
collecting the land rent, as our common treasure.
All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of
man. The general spread of the light of science has
already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that
the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on
their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready
to ride them legitimately, by the grace of
God.
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to Roger C. Weightman, June
26, 1826,
before the celebration of the 50th anniversary
of the Declaration of Independence
In the countries that many of our ancestors fled, the
laws and traditions called for primogeniture, the
practice of the father's land being left to the eldest
son, so as not to split it up into properties so small
that one could not support a nuclear family from it. The
daughters and the younger sons were left to make their
own way as best they could, taking up trades. The eldest
sons continued as landlords, with the privilege of
collecting rent from the children of their fathers'
tenants. (Do you remember the WWII movie, The White
Cliffs of Dover?)
Yes, we abolished primogeniture, so all one's children
could inherit equally.
But today, with the increasingly skewed distribution
of wealth, the children of a few of us are able to
inherit huge sums of money, valuable pieces of land,
rights to natural resources including energy, minerals,
water and the airwaves, corporate stock and business
equity, while the children of the rest of us inherit
little or nothing. But we hold it to be a self-evident
truth that we are all created equal. What is it that we
send our troops into harm's way to protect? Is it that we
are all created equal, or is it the privileges
that are accorded to those who own our land and natural
resources, and their children?
The Most Rev. Dr Thomas Nulty, Roman Catholic Bishop of
Meath (Ireland): Back to
the Land (1881)
The Whole People the True Owners of
the Land.
When, therefore, a privileged
class arrogantly claims a right of private property in
the land of a country, that claim is simply
unintelligible, except in the broad principle that the
land of a country is not a free gift at all, but solely a
family inheritance; that it is not a free gift which God
has bestowed on His creatures, but an inheritance which
he has left to His children; that they, therefore, being
God's eldest sons, inherit this property by right of
succession; that the rest of the world have no share or
claim to it, on the ground that origin is tainted with
the stain of illegitimacy. The world, however,
will hardly submit to this shameful imputation of its own
degradation, especially when it is not sustained by even
a shadow of reason.
I infer, therefore, that no
individual or class of individuals can hold a right of
private property in the land of a country; that the people
of that country, in their public corporate capacity, are,
and always must be, the real owners of the land of their
country -- holding an indisputable title to it, in the fact
that they received it as a free gift from its Creator, and
as a necessary means for preserving and enjoying the life
He has bestowed upon them. ...
The essential and immutable
principles of justice used certainly to be: --
That everyone had a right of property
in the hard-earned fruits of his labour; that whatever
property a man had made by the expenditure of his capital,
his industry and his toil, was really his own; that he, and
he alone, had a right to all the benefits, the advantages
and enjoyments that that property yielded; and that if
anyone else meddled with that property against his will, or
interfered with him in its enjoyment, he was thereby guilty
of the crimes of theft and of robbery, which the eternal
law of God, as well as the laws of all nations, reprobated
and punished with such severity.
But the principles which underlie the
existing system of Land Tenure, and which impart to it its
specific and distinctive character, are exactly the reverse
of these. The principles on which that system is based are:
--
That one privileged class do not
require to labour for their livelihood at all: that they
have an exclusive right to all the advantages, comforts and
enjoyments that can be derived from a splendid property,
which exacted no patient, painful or self-denying efforts
of labour to create it or acquire it, and which, in fact,
they inherited without any sacrifice at all: that, being a singularly favoured race, and being all
God's eldest sons, the rest of the world must humbly
acknowledge themselves to be their inferiors in rank,
lineage, condition and dignity: that this
superiority of rank gives them a right to sell out God's
gifts as if they were purely the products of their own
labour and industry, and that they can exact in exchange
for them famine or scarcity prices. Finally, that they
enjoy the enviable privilege of appropriating the
hard-earned property of others against their wills, and do
them no wrong even if they charge them a rent for the use
of what would really appear to be their own. ...
Read the
whole letter Henry George: Thou Shalt Not Steal
(1887 speech)
Who can claim a title of absolute ownership in
land? Until one who claims the exclusive ownership of a
piece of this planet can show a title originating with
the Maker of this planet; until that one can produce a
decree from the Creator declaring that this city lot, or
that great tract of agricultural or coal land, or that
gas well, was made for that one person alone —
until then we have a right to hold that the land was
intended for all of us.
Natural religion and revealed religion alike tell
us that God is no respecter of persons; that He did not
make this planet for a few individuals; that He did not
give it to one generation in preference to other
generations, but that He made it for the use during their
lives of all the people that His providence brings into
the world. If this be true, the child that is born
tonight in the humblest tenement in the most squalid
quarter of New York, comes into life seized with as good
a title to the land of this city as any Astor or
Rhinelander. ... read the whole
article
Henry George: The Land Question
(1881)
And why should the landlords be paid? If the land
of Ireland belongs of natural right to the Irish people,
what valid claim for payment can be set up by the
landlords?No one will contend that the
land is theirs of natural right, for the day has gone by
when men could be told that the Creator of the universe
intended his bounty for the exclusive use and benefit of
a privileged class of his creatures – that he
intended a few to roll in luxury while their fellows
toiled and starved for them. The claim of the
landlords to the land rests not on natural right, but
merely on municipal law – on municipal law which
contravenes natural right. And, whenever the sovereign
power changes municipal law so as to conform to natural
right, what claim can they assert to compensation? Some
of them bought their lands, it is true; but they got no
better title than the seller had to give. And what are
these titles? Titles based on murder and robbery, on
blood and rapine–titles which rest on the most
atrocious and wholesale crimes. Created by force and
maintained by force, they have not behind them the first
shadow of right. That Henry II and James I and Cromwell
and the Long Parliament had the power to give and grant
Irish lands is true; but will any one contend they had
the right? Will any one contend that in
all the past generations there has existed on the British
Isles or anywhere else any human being, or any number of
human beings, who had the right to say that in the year
1881 the great mass of Irishmen should be compelled to
pay – in many cases to residents of England,
France, or the United States – for the privilege of
living in their native country and making a living from
their native soil? Even if it be said that might
makes right; even if it be contended that in the twelfth,
or seventeenth, or eighteenth century lived men who,
having the power, had therefore the right, to give away
the soil of Ireland, it cannot be contended that their
right went further than their power, or that their gifts
and grants are binding on the men of the present
generation. No one can urge such a preposterous doctrine.
And, if might makes right, then the moment the people get
power to take the land the rights of the present
landholders utterly cease, and any proposal to compensate
them is a proposal to do a fresh wrong. ...
read the whole article
Henry George:
Thy Kingdom Come (1889 speech)
.. There was a little dialogue
published in the United States, in the west, some time ago.
Possibly you may have seen it. It is between a boy and his
father when visiting a brickyard. The boy looks at the men
making bricks, and he asks who those dirty men are, why
they are making up the clay, and what they are doing it
for. He learns, and then he asks about the owner of the
brickyard. “He does not make any bricks; he gets his
income from letting the other men make
bricks.”
Then the boy wants to know how the
man who owns the brickyard gets his title to the brickyard
— whether he made it. “No, he did not make
it,” the father replies: “God made it.”
The boy asks, “Did God make it for him?”
Whereat his father tells him that he must not ask questions
such as that, but that anyhow it is all right, and it is
all in accordance with God’s law. The boy, who of
course was a Sunday school boy, and had been to church,
goes off mumbling to himself “that God so loved the
world that He gave His only begotten Son to die for all
men”; but that He so loved the owner of this
brickyard that He gave him the brickyard too.
This has a blasphemous sound. But I
do not refer to it lightly. I do not like to speak lightly
of sacred subjects. Yet it is well sometimes that we should
be fairly shocked into thinking.
Think of what Christianity teaches
us; think of the life and death of Him who came to die for
us! Think of His teachings, that we are all the equal
children of an Almighty Father, who is no respecter of
persons, and then think of this legalised injustice —
this denial of the most important, most fundamental rights
of the children of God, which so many of the very men who
teach Christianity uphold; nay, which they blasphemously
assert is the design and the intent of the Creator Himself.
...
Read the whole speech
Henry George,
Progress and Poverty:
Section VII: Justice of the Remedy; Chapter 5: Of Property
in Land in the United States
In short, the American people have failed to see the
essential injustice of private property in land, because
as yet they have not felt its full effects. This public
domain -- the vast extent of land yet to be reduced to
private possession, the enormous common to which the
faces of the energetic were always turned, has been the
great fact that, since the days when the first
settlements began to fringe the Atlantic Coast, has
formed our national character and colored our national
thought. It is not that we have eschewed a titled
aristocracy and abolished primogeniture; that we elect
all our officers from school director up to president;
that our laws run in the name of the people, instead of
in the name of a prince; that the State knows no
religion, and our judges wear no wigs -- that we have
been exempted from the ills that Fourth of July orators
used to point to as characteristic of the effete
despotisms of the Old World. The general
intelligence, the general comfort, the active invention,
the power of adaptation and assimilation, the free,
independent spirit, the energy and hopefulness that have
marked our people, are not causes, but results -- they
have sprung from unfenced land. This public
domain has been the transmuting force which has turned
the thriftless, unambitious European peasant into the
self-reliant Western farmer; it has given a consciousness
of freedom even to the dweller in crowded cities, and has
been a wellspring of hope even to those who have never
thought of taking refuge upon it. The child of the
people, as he grows to manhood in Europe, finds all the
best seats at the banquet of life marked "taken," and
must struggle with his fellows for the crumbs that fall,
without one chance in a thousand of forcing or sneaking
his way to a seat. In America, whatever his condition,
there has always been the consciousness that the public
domain lay behind him; and the knowledge of this fact,
acting and reacting, has penetrated our whole national
life, giving to it generosity and independence,
elasticity and ambition. All that we are proud of
in the American character; all that makes our conditions
and institutions better than those of older countries, we
may trace to the fact that land has been cheap in the
United States, because new soil has been open to the
emigrant.
But our advance has reached the Pacific. Further west
we cannot go, and increasing population can but expand
north and south and fill up what has been passed over.
North, it is already filling up the valley of the Red
River, pressing into that of the Saskatchewan and
pre-empting Washington Territory; south, it is covering
western Texas and taking up the arable valleys of New
Mexico and Arizona.
The republic has entered upon a new era, an era in
which the monopoly of the land will tell with
accelerating effect. The great fact which has been so
potent is ceasing to be. The public domain is almost gone
-- a very few years will end its influence, already
rapidly failing. I do not mean to say that there will be
no public domain. For a long time to come there will be
millions of acres of public lands carried on the books of
the Land Department. But it must be remembered that the
best part of the continent for agricultural purposes is
already overrun, and that it is the poorest land that is
left. It must be remembered that what remains comprises
the great mountain ranges, the sterile deserts, the high
plains fit only for grazing. And it must be remembered
that much of this land which figures in the reports as
open to settlement is unsurveyed land, which has been
appropriated by possessory claims or locations which do
not appear until the land is returned as surveyed.
California figures on the books of the Land Department as
the greatest land state of the Union, containing nearly
100,000,000 acres of public land -- something like
one-twelfth of the whole public domain. Yet so much of
this is covered by railroad grants or held in the way of
which I have spoken; so much consists of untillable
mountains or plains which require irrigation; so much is
monopolized by locations which command the water, that as
a matter of fact it is difficult to point the immigrant
to any part of the state where he can take up a farm on
which he can settle and maintain a family, and so men,
weary of the quest, end by buying land or renting it on
shares. It is not that there is any real scarcity of land
in California -- for, an empire in herself, California
will some day maintain a population as large as that of
France -- but appropriation has got ahead of the settler
and manages to keep just ahead of him. ...
read the whole chapter
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
c. Significance of the Upward Tendency of
Rent
Now, what is the meaning of this tendency of Rent to
rise with social progress, while Wages tend to fall? Is
it not a plain promise that if Rent be treated as common
property, advances in productive power shall be steps in
the direction of realizing through orderly and natural
growth those grand conceptions of both the socialist and
the individualist, which in the present condition of
society are justly ranked as Utopian? Is it not
likewise a plain warning that if Rent be treated as
private property, advances in productive power will be
steps in the direction of making slaves of the many
laborers, and masters of a few land-owners? Does
it not mean that common ownership of Rent is in harmony
with natural law, and that its private appropriation is
disorderly and degrading? When the cause of Rent and the
tendency illustrated in the preceding chart are
considered in connection with the self-evident truth that
God made the earth for common use and not for private
monopoly, how can a contrary inference hold? Caused and
increased by social growth, 97 the benefits of which
should be common, and attaching to land, the just right
to which is equal, Rent must be the natural fund for
public expenses. 98
97. Here, far away from civilization, is
a solitary settler. Getting no benefits from
government, he needs no public revenues, and none of
the land about him has any value. Another settler
comes, and another, until a village appears. Some
public revenue is then required. Not much, but some.
And the land has a little value, only a little; perhaps
just enough to equal the need for public revenue. The
village becomes a town. More revenues are needed, and
land values are higher. It becomes a city. The public
revenues required are enormous, and so are the land
values.
98. Society, and society alone, causes
Rent. Rising with the rise, advancing with the growth,
and receding with the decline of society, it measures
the earning power of society as a whole as
distinguished from that of the individuals. Wages, on
the other hand, measure the earning power of the
individuals as distinguished from that of society as a
whole. We have distinguished the parts into which
Wealth is distributed as Wages and Rent; but it would
be correct, indeed it is the same thing, to regard all
wealth as earnings, and to distinguish the two kinds as
Communal Earnings and Individual Earnings. How, then,
can there be any question as to the fund from which
society should be supported? How can it be justly
supported in any other way than out of its own
earnings?
If there be at all such a thing as design in the
universe — and who can doubt it? — then has
it been designed that Rent, the earnings of the
community, shall be retained for the support of the
community, and that Wages, the earnings of the
individual, shall be left to the individual in proportion
to the value of his service. This is the divine law,
whether we trace it through complex moral and economic
relations, or find it in the eighth commandment.
... read the
book
Upton Sinclair: The
Consequences of Land Speculation are Tenantry and Debt on
the Farms, and Slums and Luxury in the Cities
I know of a woman — I have never had the
pleasure of making her acquaintance, because she lives in
a lunatic asylum, which does not happen to be on my
visiting list. This woman has been mentally incompetent
from birth. She is well taken care of, because her father
left her when he died the income of a large farm on the
outskirts of a city. The city has since grown and the
land is now worth, at conservative estimate, about twenty
million dollars. It is covered with office buildings, and
the greater part of the income, which cannot be spent by
the woman, is piling up at compound interest. The woman
enjoys good health, so she may be worth a hundred million
dollars before she dies.
I choose this case because it is one about which there
can be no disputing; this woman has never been able to do
anything to earn that twenty million dollars. And if a
visitor from Mars should come down to study the
situation, which would he think was most insane, the
unfortunate woman, or the society which compels thousands
of people to wear themselves to death in order to pay her
the income of twenty million dollars?
The fact that this woman is insane makes it easy to
see that she is not entitled to the "unearned increment"
of the land she owns. But how about all the other people
who have bought up and are holding for speculation the
most desirable land? The value of this land increases,
not because of anything these owners do — not
because of any useful service they render to the
community — but purely because the community as a
whole is crowding into that neighborhood and must have
use of the land.
The speculator who bought this land thinks that he
deserves the increase, because he guessed the fact that
the city was going to grow that way. But it seems clear
enough that his skill in guessing which way the community
was going to grow, however useful that skill may be to
himself, is not in any way useful to the community. The
man may have planted trees, or built roads, and put in
sidewalks and sewers; all that is useful work, and for
that he should be paid. But should he be paid for
guessing what the rest of us were going to need?
Before you answer, consider the consequences of this
guessing game. The consequences of land speculation are
tenantry and debt on the farms, and slums and luxury in
the cities. A great part of the necessary land is held
out of use, and so the value of all land continually
increases, until the poor man can no longer own a home.
The value of farm land also increases; so year by year
more independent farmers are dispossessed, because they
cannot pay interest on their mortgages. So the land
becomes a place of serfdom, that land described by the
poet, "where wealth accumulates and men decay." The great
cities fill up with festering slums, and a small class of
idle parasites are provided with enormous fortunes, which
they do not have to earn, and which they cannot
intelligently spend. ...
In Philadelphia, as in all our great cities, are
enormously wealthy families, living on hereditary incomes
derived from crowded slums. Here and there among these
rich men is one who realizes that he has not earned what
he is consuming, and that it has not brought him
happiness, and is bringing still less to his children.
Such men are casting about for ways to invest their money
without breeding idleness and parasitism. Some of them
might be grateful to learn about this enclave plan, and
to visit the lovely village of Arden, and see what its
people are doing to make possible a peaceful and joyous
life, even in this land of bootleggers and jazz
orchestras. ... read
the whole article
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
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.) ...
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. (51.)
This, like much else that your Holiness says, is
masked in the use of the indefinite terms “private
property” and “private owner” — a
want of precision in the use of words that has doubtless
aided in the confusion of your own thought. But the
context leaves no doubt that by private property you mean
private property in land, and by private owner, the
private owner of land.
The contention, thus made, that private property in
land is from nature, not from man, has no other basis
than the confounding of ownership with possession and the
ascription to property in land of what belongs to its
contradictory, property in the proceeds of labor. You do
not attempt to show for it any other basis, nor has any
one else ever attempted to do so. That private property
in the products of labor is from nature is clear, for
nature gives such things to labor and to labor alone. Of
every article of this kind, we know that it came into
being as nature’s response to the exertion of an
individual man or of individual men — given by
nature directly and exclusively to him or to them. Thus
there inheres in such things a right of private property,
which originates from and goes back to the source of
ownership, the maker of the thing. This right is anterior
to the state and superior to its enactments, so that, as
we hold, it is a violation of natural right and an
injustice to the private owner for the state to tax the
processes and products of labor. They do not belong to
Caesar. They are things that God, of whom nature is but
an expression, gives to those who apply for them in the
way he has appointed — by labor.
But who will dare trace the individual
ownership of land to any grant from the Maker of
land? What does nature give to such ownership?
how does she in any way recognize it? Will any one show
from difference of form or feature, of stature or
complexion, from dissection of their bodies or analysis
of their powers and needs, that one man was intended by
nature to own land and another to live on it as his
tenant? That which derives its existence from man and
passes away like him, which is indeed but the evanescent
expression of his labor, man may hold and transfer as the
exclusive property of the individual; but how can such
individual ownership attach to land, which existed before
man was, and which continues to exist while the
generations of men come and go — the unfailing
storehouse that the Creator gives to man for “the
daily supply of his daily wants”?
Clearly, the private ownership of land is from the
state, not from nature. Thus, not merely can no objection
be made on the score of morals when it is proposed that
the state shall abolish it altogether, but insomuch as it
is a violation of natural right, its existence involving
a gross injustice on the part of the state, an
“impious violation of the benevolent intention of
the Creator,” it is a moral duty that the state so
abolish it.
So far from there being anything unjust in
taking the full value of landownership for the use of the
community, the real injustice is in leaving it in private
hands — an injustice that amounts to robbery and
murder.
And when your Holiness shall see this I have no fear
that you will listen for one moment to the impudent plea
that before the community can take what God intended it
to take — before men who have been
disinherited of their natural rights can be restored to
them, the present owners of land shall first be
compensated.
For not only will you see that the single tax will
directly and largely benefit small landowners, whose
interests as laborers and capitalists are much greater
than their interests as landowners, and that though the
great landowners — or rather the propertied class
in general among whom the profits of landownership are
really divided through mortgages, rent-charges, etc.
— would relatively lose, they too would be absolute
gainers in the increased prosperity and improved morals;
but more quickly, more strongly, more peremptorily than
from any calculation of gains or losses would your duty
as a man, your faith as a Christian, forbid you to listen
for one moment to any such paltering with right and
wrong.
Where the state takes some land for public uses it is
only just that those whose land is taken should be
compensated, otherwise some landowners would be treated
more harshly than others. But where, by a measure
affecting all alike, rent is appropriated for the benefit
of all, there can be no claim to compensation.
Compensation in such case would be a continuance of the
same in another form — the giving to landowners in
the shape of interest of what they before got as rent.
Your Holiness knows that justice and injustice are not
thus to be juggled with, and when you fully realize that
land is really the storehouse that God owes to
all his children, you will no more listen to any
demand for compensation for restoring it to them than
Moses would have listened to a demand that Pharaoh should
be compensated before letting the children of Israel
go.
Compensated for what? For giving up what has been
unjustly taken? The demand of landowners for compensation
is not that. We do not seek to spoil the Egyptians. We do
not ask that what has been unjustly taken from laborers
shall be restored. We are willing that bygones should be
bygones and to leave dead wrongs to bury their dead. We
propose to let those who by the past appropriation of
land values have taken the fruits of labor to retain what
they have thus got. We merely propose that for
the future such robbery of labor shall cease — that
for the future, not for the past, landholders shall pay
to the community the rent that to the community is justly
due. ...
If when in speaking of the practical measures your
Holiness proposes, I did not note the moral injunctions
that the Encyclical contains, it is not because we do not
think morality practical. On the contrary it seems to us
that in the teachings of morality is to be found the
highest practicality, and that the question, What is
wise? may always safely be subordinated to the question,
What is right? But your Holiness in the Encyclical
expressly deprives the moral truths you state of all real
bearing on the condition of labor, just as the American
people, by their legalization of chattel slavery, used to
deprive of all practical meaning the declaration they
deem their fundamental charter, and were accustomed to
read solemnly on every national anniversary. That
declaration asserts that “We hold these truths to
be self-evident — that all men are created equal;
that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness.” But what did this
truth mean on the lips of men who asserted that one man
was the rightful property of another man who had bought
him; who asserted that the slave was robbing the master
in running away, and that the man or the woman who helped
the fugitive to escape, or even gave him a cup of cold
water in Christ’s name, was an accessory to theft,
on whose head the penalties of the state should be
visited?
Consider the moral teachings of the Encyclical:
- You tell us that God owes to man an inexhaustible
storehouse which he finds only in the land. Yet you
support a system that denies to the great majority of
men all right of recourse to this storehouse.
- You tell us that the necessity of labor is a
consequence of original sin. Yet you support a system
that exempts a privileged class from the necessity for
labor and enables them to shift their share and much
more than their share of labor on others.
- You tell us that God has not created us for the
perishable and transitory things of earth, but has
given us this world as a place of exile and not as our
true country. Yet you tell us that some of the exiles
have the exclusive right of ownership in this place of
common exile, so that they may compel their
fellow-exiles to pay them for sojourning here, and that
this exclusive ownership they may transfer to other
exiles yet to come, with the same right of excluding
their fellows.
- You tell us that virtue is the common
inheritance of all; that all men are children of God
the common Father; that all have the same last end;
that all are redeemed by Jesus Christ; that the
blessings of nature and the gifts of grace belong in
common to all, and that to all except the unworthy is
promised the inheritance of the Kingdom of Heaven! Yet
in all this and through all this you insist as a moral
duty on the maintenance of a system that makes the
reservoir of all God’s material bounties and
blessings to man the exclusive property of a few of
their number — you give us equal rights in
heaven, but deny us equal rights on
earth!
It was said of a famous decision of the Supreme Court
of the United States made just before the civil war, in a
fugitive-slave case, that “it gave the law to the
North and the nigger to the South.” It is thus that
your Encyclical gives the gospel to laborers and the
earth to the landlords. Is it really to be wondered at
that there are those who sneeringly say, “The
priests are ready enough to give the poor an equal share
in all that is out of sight, but they take precious good
care that the rich shall keep a tight grip on all that is
within sight”?
... read
the whole letter
Joseph Fels: True
Christianity and My Own Religious Beliefs
Do you question the relationship between taxation
and righteousness? Let us see. If government is a natural
growth, then surely God's natural law provides food and
sustenance for government as that food is needed; for
where in Nature do we find a creature coming into the
world without timely provision of natural food for it? It
is in our system of taxation that we find the most
emphatic denial of the Fatherhood of God and the
Brotherhood of Man, because,
- first, in order to meet our common needs, we
take from individuals what does not belong to us in
common;
- second, we permit individuals to take for
themselves what does belong to us in common;
- thus, third, under the pretext of taxation for
public purposes, we have established a system that
permits some men to tax other men for private
profit.
Does not that violate the natural, the divine
law? Does it not surely beget wolfish greed on the one
hand, and gaunt poverty on the other? Does it not surely
breed millionaires on one end of the social scale and
tramps on the other end? Has it not brought into
civilization a hell, of which the savage can have no
conception? Could any better system be
devised for convincing men that God is the father of a
few and the stepfather of the many? Is not that
destructive of the sentiment of brotherhood? With such a
condition, how is it possible for men in masses to obey
the new commandment, "that ye love one another"? What
could more surely thrust men apart? What
could more surely divide them into warring classes?
...
Nowhere do these differences between wealth and
poverty coincide with differences in individual powers
and aptitudes. The real difference between rich and poor
is the difference between those who hold the tollgates
and those who pay toll; between tribute-receivers and
tribute-yielders.
In what way does nature justify such a difference? In
the numberless varieties of animated nature we find some
species that are evidently intended to live on other
species. But their relations are always marked by
unmistakable differences in size, shape or organs. To man
has been given dominion over all the other living things
that tenant the earth. But is not this mastery indicated
even in externals, so that no one can fail on sight to
distinguish between a man and one of the inferior
animals? Our American apologists for slavery used to
contend that the black skin and woolly hair of the negro
indicated the intent of nature that the black should
serve the white; but the difference that you assume to be
natural is between men of the same race. What
difference does nature show between such men as would
indicate her intent that one should live idly yet be
rich, and the other should work hard yet be
poor? If I could bring you from the United
States a man who has $200,000,000, and one who is glad to
work for a few dollars a week, and place them side by
side in your antechamber, would you be able to tell which
was which, even were you to call in the most skilled
anatomist? Is it not clear that God in no way
countenances or condones the division of rich and poor
that exists today, or in any way permits it, except as
having given them free will he permits men to choose
either good or evil, and to avoid heaven if they prefer
hell. For is it not clear that the division of
men into the classes rich and poor has invariably its
origin in force and fraud; invariably involves violation
of the moral law; and is really a division into those who
get the profits of robbery and those who are robbed;
those who hold in exclusive possession what God made for
all, and those who are deprived of his bounty?
Did not Christ in all his utterances and parables show
that the gross difference between rich and poor is
opposed to God’s law? Would he have condemned the
rich so strongly as he did, if the class distinction
between rich and poor did not involve injustice —
was not opposed to God’s intent?
... read the whole letter
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