Injustice
To what should our elected representatives, our
executive branch and our courts be devoted, if not to
creating social and economic justice and a society with
no victims?
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. — Henry George
If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you
have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has
its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are
neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality."
— Archbishop Desmond Tutu
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. ...
Only in broken gleams and partial light has the sun of
Liberty yet beamed among men, but all progress hath she
called forth. ...
Shall we not trust her?
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?
Though it may take the language of prayer, it
is blasphemy that attributes to the inscrutable decrees
of Providence the suffering and brutishness that come of
poverty; that turns with folded hands to the All-Father
and lays on Him the responsibility for the want and crime
of our great cities. We degrade the Everlasting.
We slander the Just One. A merciful man would have better
ordered the world; a just man would crush with his foot
such an ulcerous ant-hill! It is not the Almighty, but we
who are responsible for the vice and misery that fester
amid our civilization. The Creator showers upon us his
gifts — more than enough for all. But like swine
scrambling for food, we tread them in the mire —
tread them in the mire, while we tear and rend each
other!
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 fiftyfold 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.
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.
- 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
round 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
landowners get all the gain.
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. ...
- 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!
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 chapter
Henry George: Thy Kingdom
Come (1889 speech)
... But there are people, who, looking around on
the suffering and injustice with which, even in so-called
Christian countries, human life is full, say there is no
Father in Heaven, there can be no God, or He would not
permit this. How superficial is that thought!
...
When we consider the achievements of
humanity and then look upon the misery that exists today in
the very centres of wealth; upon the ignorance, the
weakness, the injustice, that characterise our highest
civilisation, we may know of a surety that it is not the
fault of God; it is the fault of humanity. May we not know
that in that very power that God has given to His children
here, in that power of rising higher, there is involved
— and necessarily involved — the power of
falling lower.
“Our Father!” “Our
Father!” Whose? Not my
Father — that is not the prayer. “Our Father” — not the
father of any sect, or any class, but the Father of all
humanity. The All-Father, the equal Father, the loving
Father. He it is we ask to bring the kingdom. Aye, we ask
it with our lips! We call Him “Our Father,” the
All, the Universal Father, when we kneel down to pray to
Him.
But that He is the All-Father —
that He is all people’s Father — we deny by our
institutions. The All-Father who made the world, the
All-Father who created us in His image, and put us upon the
earth to draw subsistence from its bosom; to find in the
earth all the materials that satisfy our wants, waiting
only to be worked up by our labour! If He is the
All-Father, then are not all human beings, all children of
the Creator, equally entitled to the use of His bounty?
And, yet, our laws say that this God’s earth is not
here for the use of all His children, but only for the use
of a privileged few!
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.
...
What God gives are the natural
elements that are indispensable to labour. He gives them,
not to one, not to some, not to one generation, but to all.
They are His gifts, His bounty to the whole human race. And
yet in all our civilised countries what do we see? That a
few people have appropriated these bounties, claiming them
as theirs alone, while the great majority have no legal
right to apply their labour to the reservoirs of Nature and
draw from the Creator’s bounty.
Thus it happens that all over the civilised
world that class that is called peculiarly ‘the
labouring class’ is the poor class, and that people
who do no labour, who pride themselves on never having
done honest labour, and on being descended from fathers
and grandfathers who never did a stroke of honest labour
in their lives, revel in a superabundance of the things
that labour brings forth.
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.
...
Early Christianity did not mean, in
its prayer for the coming of Christ’s kingdom, a
kingdom in heaven, but a kingdom on earth. If Christ had
simply preached of the other world, the high priests and
the Pharisees would not have persecuted Him, the Roman
soldiery would not have nailed His hands to the cross. Why
was Christianity persecuted?
...
What was persecuted was a great
movement for social reform — the gospel of justice
— heard by common fishermen with gladness, carried by
labourers and slaves into the imperial city of Rome. The
Christian revelation was the doctrine of human equality, of
the fatherhood of God, of the brotherhood and sisterhood of
humanity. It struck at the very basis of that monstrous
tyranny that then oppressed the civilised world; it struck
at the fetters of the captive, and at the bonds of the
slave, at that monstrous injustice which allowed a class to
revel on the proceeds of labour, while those who did the
labour fared scantily. ...
And, instead of preaching the
essential Fatherhood of God, the essential brotherhood and
sisterhood of humankind, its high priests grafted onto the
pure truths of the gospel the blasphemous doctrine that the
All-Father is a respecter of persons, and that by His will
and on His mandate is founded that monstrous injustice
which condemns the great mass of humanity to unrequited
hard toil. There has been no failure of Christianity. The
failure has been in the sort of Christianity that has been
preached. ... 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! ...
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. ...
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.
It is this that turns the blessings of material
progress into a curse. ...
Though it may take the language of prayer, it is
blasphemy that attributes to the inscrutable decrees of
Providence the suffering and brutishness that come of
poverty; that turns with folded hands to the All-Father
and lays on Him the responsibility for the want and crime
of our great cities. We degrade the Everlasting. We
slander the Just One. ...
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 Wages of Labor
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.
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, if seems like a violation of Christian charity
to speak of the rich as though they individually were
responsible for the sufferings of the poor. Yet many do
this while at the same time insisting that land monopoly,
the cause of monstrous wealth and degrading poverty, shall
not be touched.
In seeking to restore to all men 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. Nor do we seek any futile and ridiculous
equality. We recognise that there must always be
differences and inequalities. In so far as these are in
conformity with the moral law, in so far as they do not
violate the command, “Thou shalt not steal,”
we are content.
The equality we would bring about is
not the equality of fortune, but the equality of natural
opportunity; the equality that reason and religion alike
proclaim – the equality in usufruct of all His
children to the bounty of Our Father Who art in
Heaven!
In doing this, we would not levy the
slightest tax on the possessors of wealth, no matter how
rich they might be.
Not only do we deem such taxes a
violation of the right of property, but we see that it is
impossible for any one to produce wealth for himself
without adding to the wealth of the world....
read the whole
article Henry George:
Concentrations of Wealth Harm
America(excerpt
from Social
Problems)
(1883)
The Evils of Monopolists
Consider the important part in
building up fortunes which the increase of land values
has had, and is having, in the United States. This is, of
course, monopoly, pure and simple. When land
increases in value it does not mean that its owner has
added to the general wealth. The owner may never have
seen the land or done aught to improve it. He may, and
often does, live in a distant city or in another country.
Increase of land values simply means
that the owners, by virtue of their appropriation of
something that existed before man was, have the power of
taking a larger share of the wealth produced by other
people's labor. Consider
- how much the monopolies created and the
advantages given to the unscrupulous by the tariff and by
our system of internal taxation --
- how much the railroad (a business in its
nature a monopoly), telegraph, gas, water and other
similar monopolies, have done to concentrate
wealth;
- how special rates, pools, combinations,
corners, stock-watering and stock-gambling, the
destructive use of wealth in driving off or buying off
opposition which the public must finally pay for, and
many other things which these will suggest, have operated
to build up large fortunes, and it will at least appear
that the unequal distribution of wealth
is due in great measure to sheer
spoliation;
- that the reason why those who
work hard get so little, while so many who work little
get so much, is, in very large measure, that the earnings
of the one class are, in one way or another, filched away
from them to swell the incomes of the
other.
That individuals are constantly making their
way from the ranks of those who get less than their
earnings to the ranks of those who get more than their
earnings, no more proves this state of things right than
the fact that merchant sailors were constantly becoming
pirates and participating in the profits of piracy, would
prove that piracy was right and that no effort should be
made to suppress it.
I am not denouncing the rich, nor seeking, by
speaking of these things, to excite envy and hatred; but
if we would get a clear understanding of social problems,
we must recognize the fact that it is due
- to monopolies which we permit and
create,
- to advantages which we give one man over
another,
- to methods of extortion sanctioned by law and
by public opinion,
that some men are enabled to get so enormously
rich while others remain so miserably poor. If we look around us and note the elements of
monopoly, extortion and spoliation which go to the
building up of all, or nearly all, fortunes, we see on
the one hand now disingenuous are those who preach to us
that there is nothing wrong in social relations and that
the inequalities in the distribution of wealth spring
from the inequalities of human nature; and on the other
hand, we see how wild are those who talk as though
capital were a public enemy, and propose plans for
arbitrarily restricting the acquisition of wealth.
Capital is a good; the capitalist is a
helper, if he is not also a monopolist. We can safely let
any one get as rich as he can if he will not despoil
others in doing so.
There are deep wrongs in the present
constitution of society, but they are not wrongs inherent
in the constitution of man nor in those social laws which
are as truly the laws of the Creator as are the laws of the
physical universe. They are wrongs resulting from bad
adjustments which it is within our power to amend.
The ideal social state is not that in
which each gets an equal amount of wealth, but in which
each gets in proportion to his contribution to the general
stock. And in such a social state
there would not be less incentive to exertion than now;
there would be far more incentive. Men will be more
industrious and more moral, better workmen and better
citizens, if each takes his earnings and carries them home
to his family, than where they put their earnings in a
"pot" and gamble for them until some have far more than
they could have earned, and others have little or nothing.
...
Read the entire
article
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
"Wise" and "Babes"
IT is as bad for a man to think that he can know nothing
as to think he knows all. There are things which it is
given to all possessing reason to know, if they will but
use that reason. And some things it may be there are,
that — as was said by one whom the learning of the
time sneered at, and the high priests persecuted, and
polite society, speaking through the voice of those who
knew not what they did, crucified — are hidden from
the wise and prudent and revealed unto babes. —
A Perplexed
Philosopher
(Conclusion)
THAT thought on social questions is so confused and
perplexed, that the aspirations of great bodies of men,
deeply though vaguely conscious of injustice, are in all
civilized countries being diverted to futile and
dangerous remedies, is largely due to the fact that those
who assume and are credited with superior knowledge of
social and economic laws have devoted their powers, not
to showing where the injustice lies but to hiding it; not
to clearing common thought but to confusing it. —
A Perplexed
Philosopher
(Conclusion)
POLITICAL economy is the simplest of the sciences. It is
but the intellectual recognition, as related to social
life, of laws which in their moral aspect men
instinctively recognize, and which are embodied in the
simple teachings of him whom the common people heard
gladly. But, like Christianity, political economy has
been warped by institutions which, denying the equality
and brotherhood of man, have enlisted authority, silenced
objection, and ingrained themselves in custom and habit
of thought. — Protection or Free Trade,
Chapter 1
econlib
Power of Thought
THE power of a special interest, though
inimical to the general interest, so to influence common
thought as to make fallacies pass as truths, is a great
fact, without which neither the political history of our
own time and people, nor that of other times and peoples,
can be understood. A comparatively small number of
individuals brought into virtual though not necessarily
formal agreement of thought and action by something that
makes them individually wealthy without adding to the
general wealth, may exert an influence out of all
proportion to their numbers. A special interest of this
kind is, to the general interests of society, as a
standing army is to an unorganized mob. It gains
intensity and energy in its specialization, and in the
wealth it takes from the general stock finds power to
mold opinion. Leisure and culture and the circumstances
and conditions that command respect accompany wealth, and
intellectual ability is attracted by it. On the other
hand, those who suffer from the injustice that takes from
the many to enrich the few, are in that very thing
deprived of the leisure to think, and the opportunities,
education, and graces necessary to give their thought
acceptable expression. They are necessarily the
"unlettered," the "ignorant," the "vulgar," prone in
their consciousness of weakness to look up for leadership
and guidance to those who have the advantages that the
possession of wealth can give. — The Science of
Political Economy — Book II, Chapter 2, The
Nature of Wealth: Causes of Confusion as to the Meaning
of Wealth
unabridged • abridged
WE may be wise to distrust our knowledge; and, unless we
have tested them, to distrust what we may call our
reasonings; but never to distrust reason itself. . . .
That the powers with which the human reason must work are
limited and are subject to faults and failures, our
reason itself teaches us as soon as it begins to examine
what we find around us and to endeavor to look in upon
our own consciousness. But human reason is the only
reason that men can have, and to assume that in so far as
it can see clearly it does not see truly, is in the man
who does it not only to assume the possession of a
superior to human reason, but it is to deny the validity
of all thought and to reduce the mental world to chaos.
—
The Science of Political Economy
— Book III, Chapter 5, The Production of Wealth: Of
Space and Time (unabridged)
SOCIAL reform is not to be secured by noise and shouting;
by complaints and denunciation; by the formation of
parties, or the making of revolutions; but by the
awakening of thought and the progress of ideas. Until
there be correct thought, there cannot be right action;
and when there is correct thought, right action will
follow. Power is always in the hands of the masses of
men. What oppresses the masses is their own ignorance,
their own short-sighted selfishness. —
Social Problems
— Chapter 22: Conclusion
LET no one imagine that he has no influence. Whoever he
may be, and wherever he may be placed, the man who thinks
becomes a light and a power. —
Social Problems
— Chapter 22: Conclusion
BUT is there not some line the recognition of which
will enable us to say with something like scientific
precision that this man is rich and that man is poor;
some line of possession which will enable us truly to
distinguish between rich and poor in all places and
conditions of society; a line of the natural mean or
normal possession, below which in varying degrees is
poverty, and above which in varying degrees is
wealthiness? It seems to me that there must be. And if we
stop to think of it, we may see that there is. If we set
aside for the moment the narrower economic meaning of
service, by which direct service is conveniently
distinguished from the indirect service embodied in
wealth, we may resolve all the things which directly or
indirectly satisfy human desire into one term service,
just as we resolve fractions into a common denominator.
Now is there not a natural or normal line of the
possession or enjoyment of service? Clearly there is. It
is that of equality between giving and receiving. This is
the equilibrium which Confucius expressed in the golden
word of his teaching that in English we translate into
"reciprocity." Naturally the services which a
member of a human society is entitled to receive from
other members are the equivalents of those he renders to
others. Here is the normal line from which what we call
wealthiness and what we call poverty take their start. He
who can command more service than he need render, is
rich. He is poor, who can command less service than he
does render or is willing to render: for in our
civilization of today we must take note of the monstrous
fact that men willing to work cannot always find
opportunity to work. The one has more than he ought to
have; the other has less. Rich and poor are thus
correlatives of each other; the existence of a class of
rich involves the existence of a class of poor, and the
reverse; and abnormal luxury on the one side and abnormal
want on the other have a relation of necessary sequence.
To put this relation into terms of morals, the rich are
the robbers, since they are at least sharers in the
proceeds of robbery; and the poor are the robbed. This is
the reason, I take it, why Christ, Who was not really a
man of such reckless speech as some Christians deem Him
to have been, always expressed sympathy with the poor and
repugnance of the rich. In His philosophy it was better
even to be robbed than to rob. In the kingdom of right
doing which He preached, rich and poor would be
impossible, because rich and poor in the true sense are
the results of wrong-doing. And when He said, "It is
easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle
than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven," He
simply put in the emphatic form of Eastern metaphor a
statement of fact as coldly true as the statement that
two parallel lines can never meet. Injustice
cannot live where justice rules, and even if the man
himself might get through, his riches — his power
of compelling service without rendering service —
must of necessity be left behind. If there can be no poor
in the kingdom of heaven, clearly there can be no rich.
And so it is utterly impossible in this, or in any other
conceivable world, to abolish unjust poverty, without at
the same time abolishing unjust possessions.
This is a hard word to the softly amiable
philanthropists, who, to speak metaphorically, would like
to get on the good side of God without angering the
devil. But it is a true word nevertheless. —
The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book II, Chapter 19, The Nature of Wealth:
Moral Confusions as to Wealth • abridged:
Part II, Chapter 15, The Nature of Wealth: Moral
Confusions as to Wealth THE common law we are
told is the perfection of reason, and certainly the
landowners cannot complain of its decision, for it has
been built up by and for landowners. Now what does the
law allow to the innocent possessor when the land for
which he paid his money is adjudged to rightfully belong
to another? Nothing at all. That he purchased in
good faith gives him no right or claim whatever. The law
does not concern itself with the "intricate question of
compensation" to the innocent purchaser. The law does not
say, as John Stuart Mill says: "The land belongs to A,
therefore B who has thought himself the owner has no
right to anything but the rent, or compensation for its
salable value." For that would be indeed like a famous
fugitive slave case decision in which the Court was said
to have given the law to the North and the nigger to the
South. The law simply says: "The land belongs to A, let
the Sheriff put him in possession! " —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 3, Justice of the Remedy: Claim
of Landowners to Compensation
COMPENSATED for what? For giving up what has been
unjustly taken? The demand of land-owners 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-value, have taken the fruits
of labor, retain what they have thus got. We merely
propose that for the future such robbery of labor shall
cease. — NOW, is the State called on to compensate
men for the failure of their expectations as to its
action, even where no moral element is involved? If it
make peace, must it compensate those who have invested on
the expectation of war. If it open a shorter highway, is
it morally bound to compensate those who may lose by the
diversion of travel from the old one? If it promote the
discovery of a cheap means of producing electricity
directly from heat, is it morally bound to compensate the
owners of all the steam engines thereby thrown out of use
and all who are engaged in making them? If it develop the
air-ship, must it compensate those whose business would
be injured? Such a contention would be absurd. —
The Condition of Labor
Yet the contention we are considering is worse. It is
that the State must compensate for disappointing the
expectations of those who have counted on its continuing
to do wrong. —
A Perplexed Philosopher
(Compensation)
COMPENSATION implies equivalence. To compensate for the
discontinuance of a wrong is to give those who profit by
the wrong the pecuniary equivalent of its continuance.
Now the State has nothing that does not belong to the
individuals who compose it. What it gives to some it must
take from others. Abolition with compensation is
therefore not really abolition, but continuance under a
different form — on one side of unjust deprivation,
and on the other side of unjust appropriation. —
A Perplexed Philosopher
(Compensation)
"CAVEAT emptor" is the maxim of the law — "Let
the buyer beware!" If a man buys a structure in which the
law of gravity is disregarded or mechanical laws ignored,
he takes the risk of those laws asserting their sway. And
so he takes the risk in buying property which contravenes
the moral law. When he ignores the moral sense, when he
gambles on the continuance of a wrong, and when at last
the general conscience rises to the point of refusing to
continue that wrong, can he then claim that those who
have refrained from taking part in it, those who have
suffered from it, those who have borne the burden and
heat and contumely of first moving against it, shall
share in his losses on the ground that as members of the
same state they are equally responsible for it? And must
not the acceptance of this impudent plea tend to prevent
that gradual weakening and dying out of the wrong, which
would otherwise occur as the rise of the moral sense
against it lessened the prospect of its continuance; and
by promise of insurance to investors tend to maintain it
in strength and energy till the last minute? —
A Perplexed Philosopher
(Compensation)
ALL pleas for compensation on the abolition of unequal
rights to land are excuses for avoiding right and
continuing wrong; they all, as fully as the original
wrong, deny that equalness which is the essential of
justice. Where they have seemed plausible to any
honestly-minded man, he will, if he really examines his
thought, see that this has been so because he has, though
perhaps unconsciously, entertained a sympathy for those
who seem to profit by injustice which he has refused to
those who have been injured by it. He has been thinking
of the few whose incomes would be cut off by the
restoration of equal right. He has forgotten the many,
who are being impoverished, degraded, and driven out of
life by its denial. If he once breaks through the tyranny
of accustomed ideas and truly realizes that all men are
equally entitled to the use of the natural opportunities
for the living of their lives and the development of
their powers, he will see the injustice, the wickedness,
of demanding compensation for the abolition of the
monopoly of land. He will see that if anyone is to be
compensated on the abolition of a wrong, it is those who
have suffered by the wrong, not those who have profited
by it. —
A Perplexed Philosopher
(Compensation)
... go to "Gems from
George"
Nic Tideman: Basic
Tenets of the Incentive Taxation Philosophy
We recognize that the implementation of our ideas
will lead to the disappearance of the sale value of
titles to unimproved land and other forms of privilege.
While some will see this as an unjust confiscation of
property, we deny this.
We believe that it is possible to implement our ideas
while remaining true to principles of justice. We
note first that, while we propose to introduce or
increase fees for exclusive access to opportunities
assigned by governments, we also propose to eliminate
existing taxes.
For many people the value of eliminating existing taxes
will offset the fall in the market value of the
privileges they now claim. But it cannot be expected that
all persons experience full offsets. There will be some persons whose income prospects
fall as a consequence of the implementation of our ideas.
But this in itself does not constitute injustice. Every
change disappoints someone.
It is our view that what makes a
disappointing change an injustice is not the fact of
disappointment, but rather a self-seeking disregard for
adverse consequences to those whose prospects
fall. Such selfish disregard for others must be
distinguished from the implementation of new moral
insights. Of course, one can always try to hide
self-seeking proposals behind a facade of alleged
principle.
Thus the necessary distinctions are difficult to make,
but this does not justify abandoning the effort to make
them. ... Read the
whole article
Nic Tideman: The Morality of
Taxation: The Local Case
From a moral perspective, taxation is
dubious or worse. We tell our fellow citizens that if they
do not pay taxes that we say they owe, their property will
be seized or they will be sent to prison. Why do we treat
people this way? Is there a justification?
The dubiousness of taxation increases
when we consider its origins. Government seems to have
originated as roving bandits who learned that total
destruction was less profitable than protecting their
victims from other bandits and allowing them to keep a
fraction of what they produced (Olson, 1993). In time,
scheduled partial plunder evolved into taxation. Over the
centuries, regimes that started as tyrannies evolved into
democracies. The public sector evolved from an apparatus
for implementing the will of despots into a mechanism for
carrying out democratic decisions. But public finance
continues to rely on the power of tax collectors, developed
under early tyrants, to coerce citizen to pay taxes. The
wrath that citizens feel toward tax collectors is probably
the strongest antagonistic feeling that citizens have
toward a governmental institution. Why do we allow
ourselves to do this to one another?
There is a gentler side of taxation
that provides some explanation of our tolerance of this
coercion. Taxation can be the way that people achieve their
common purposes. People may agree to be taxed so that there
will be money to pay for public services that they want.
From this perspective, taxation may be considered no more
than the dues for belonging to a club that provides people
with things that they would rather pay their share of than
do without. However, to make this "voluntary exchange"
theory of taxation relevant, people must be able to choose
freely whether or not to "join the club," to be a citizen
of the taxing jurisdiction. With all land claimed by some
taxing jurisdiction, the choice isn't exactly
free.
The problem of morality in taxation is
the following:
- How do we retain the possibility of people
pooling their contributions to the cost of services that
they agree are worthwhile, while eliminating the
possibility of citizens treating their fellow citizens as
targets of plunder?
- What are the limits of obligations that we can
justly impose on our fellow citizens?
- And how do we set up a structure of government
that will ensure that these limits are observed?
...
we would probably have a much more efficient
public sector if every public expenditure required
two-thirds approval in legislative bodies.
But to make taxation truly voluntary,
the option to leave must be viable. If people could move
costlessly from one jurisdiction to another, taking all of
their belongings with them, then competition among
jurisdictions would tend to eliminate oppressive taxation.
This would leave only the fees that people were prepared to
pay to have public services (Tiebout, 1956).
Of course, moving will always have
some costs, so the ideal will not be attainable. But what
can be imagined is a system in which all taxes were local
taxes. Then people would not have to move nearly as far to
escape from taxes that they regarded as oppressive. Higher
levels of government would not need to disappear; if the
services that they provide are desired, they could be
financed by levies on lower levels of government.
...
...Thus communities would not be able to raise
much revenue from income tax or taxes on capital before
they would drive residents and investment away. It might
seem that there would be no way that localities could
finance themselves.
Such a conclusion would be
unwarranted, because there is a very
significant source of public revenue that can survive when
localities compete for mobile residents. This source is
land. When people are taxed in proportion to the land they
possess, no land moves to another locality where
taxes are lower. Thus two questions arise:
- Would taxes on land be sufficient to finance
the public activities that ought to be undertaken,
and
- would such a system be fair?
...
If people cannot be expected to
pay for educating the children that they ought to be able
to have, doesn't that mean that there is some fundamental
unfairness in the starting conditions? Is it not the
combination of past injustice and current unequal access
to natural opportunities that makes us reluctant to
require people to pay the full costs of having
children? In my conception of justice, we have not
adequately compensated for past injustice until we have
put people in a position where we are content to oblige
them to pay the full costs of their choices. ...
Read the whole article
Dan Sullivan: Are you a
Real Libertarian, or a ROYAL Libertarian?
A favorite excuse of royal libertarians is that
the land has been divided up for so long that tracing the
rightful owners would be pointless. But there can be no
rightful owners if we all have an inalienable right of
access to the earth. It is not some ancient injustice we
seek to rectify, but an ongoing injustice. The piece of
paper granting title might be ancient, but the tribute
levied on the landless goes on and on.
One might as well have accepted
monarchy under the excuse that whatever conquest led to
monarchy occurred centuries ago, and that tracing the
rightful monarchs would be pointless. Indeed, landed
aristocracy is the last remnant of monarchy. ... Read the whole
piece
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