Intelligent Design
Georgists see a different aspect of intelligent design
from the common usage of the phrase. Read on! Henry
George expresses it eloquently in his open letter to Pope
Leo XIII, written 12 years after the publication of
Progress and
Poverty, in response to the encyclical Rerum
Novarum. George clarifies his vision of the beauties
of God's design for all his children, not just a few! And
that doesn't sound so different from the Declaration of
Independence's assertion that it is self-evident that all
people are created equal.
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
God’s laws do not change. Though their
applications may alter with altering conditions, the same
principles of right and wrong that hold when men are few
and industry is rude also hold amid teeming populations
and complex industries. In our cities of millions and our
states of scores of millions, in a civilization where the
division of labor has gone so far that large numbers are
hardly conscious that they are land-users, it still
remains true that we are all land animals and can live
only on land, and that land is God’s bounty to all,
of which no one can be deprived without being murdered,
and for which no one can be compelled to pay another
without being robbed. But even in a state of society
where the elaboration of industry and the increase of
permanent improvements have made the need for private
possession of land wide-spread, there is no difficulty in
conforming individual possession with the equal right to
land. For as soon as any piece of land will yield to the
possessor a larger return than is had by similar labor on
other land a value attaches to it which is shown when it
is sold or rented. Thus, the value of the land itself,
irrespective of the value of any improvements in or on
it, always indicates the precise value of the benefit to
which all are entitled in its use, as distinguished from
the value which, as producer or successor of a producer,
belongs to the possessor in individual right.
To combine the advantages of private possession with
the justice of common ownership it is only necessary
therefore to take for common uses what value attaches to
land irrespective of any exertion of labor on it. The
principle is the same as in the case referred to, where a
human father leaves equally to his children things not
susceptible of specific division or common use. In that
case such things would be sold or rented and the value
equally applied.
It is on this common-sense principle that we, who term
ourselves single-tax men, would have the community
act.
We do not propose to assert equal rights to land by
keeping land common, letting any one use any part of it
at any time. We do not propose the task, impossible in
the present state of society, of dividing land in equal
shares; still less the yet more impossible task of
keeping it so divided.
We propose — leaving land in the private
possession of individuals, with full liberty on their
part to give, sell or bequeath it — simply to levy
on it for public uses a tax that shall equal the annual
value of the land itself, irrespective of the use made of
it or the improvements on it. And since this would
provide amply for the need of public revenues, we would
accompany this tax on land values with the repeal of all
taxes now levied on the products and processes of
industry — which taxes, since they take from the
earnings of labor, we hold to be infringements of the
right of property.
This we propose, not as a cunning device
of human ingenuity, but as a conforming of human
regulations to the will of God.
God cannot contradict himself nor impose on his
creatures laws that clash.
If it be God’s command to men that they should
not steal — that is to say, that they should
respect the right of property which each one has in the
fruits of his labor;
And if he be also the Father of all men, who in his
common bounty has intended all to have equal
opportunities for sharing;
Then, in any possible stage of civilization, however
elaborate, there must be some way in which the exclusive
right to the products of industry may be reconciled with
the equal right to land.
If the Almighty be consistent with himself, it cannot
be, as say those socialists referred to by you, that in
order to secure the equal participation of men in the
opportunities of life and labor we must ignore the right
of private property. Nor yet can it be, as you yourself
in the Encyclical seem to argue, that to secure the right
of private property we must ignore the equality of right
in the opportunities of life and labor. To say the one
thing or the other is equally to deny the harmony of
God’s laws.
But, the private possession of land, subject to the
payment to the community of the value of any special
advantage thus given to the individual, satisfies both
laws, securing to all equal participation in the bounty
of the Creator and to each the full ownership of the
products of his labor. ...
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 revenues. For we are
not atheists, who deny God; nor semi-atheists, who deny
that he has any concern in politics and legislation.
It is true as you say — a salutary truth too
often forgotten — that “man is older than the
state, and he holds the right of providing for the life
of his body prior to the formation of any state.”
Yet, as you too perceive, it is also true that the state
is in the divinely appointed order. For He who foresaw
all things and provided for all things, foresaw and
provided that with the increase of population and the
development of industry the organization of human society
into states or governments would become both expedient
and necessary.
No sooner does the state arise than, as we all
know, it needs revenues. This need for revenues is small
at first, while population is sparse, industry rude and
the functions of the state few and simple. But with
growth of population and advance of civilization the
functions of the state increase and larger and larger
revenues are needed.
Now, He that made the world and placed man in
it, He that pre-ordained civilization as the means
whereby man might rise to higher powers and become more
and more conscious of the works of his Creator, must have
foreseen this increasing need for state revenues and have
made provision for it. That is to say: The increasing
need for public revenues with social advance, being a
natural, God-ordained need, there must be a right way of
raising them — some way that we can truly say is
the way intended by God. It is clear that this right way
of raising public revenues must accord with the moral
law.
Hence:
- It must not take from individuals what rightfully
belongs to individuals.
- It must not give some an advantage over others, as by
increasing the prices of what some have to sell and
others must buy.
- It must not lead men into temptation, by requiring
trivial oaths, by making it profitable to lie, to swear
falsely, to bribe or to take bribes.
- It must not confuse the distinctions of right and
wrong, and weaken the sanctions of religion and the state
by creating crimes that are not sins, and punishing men
for doing what in itself they have an undoubted right to
do.
- It must not repress industry. It must not check
commerce. It must not punish thrift. It must offer no
impediment to the largest production and the fairest
division of wealth.
Let me ask your Holiness to consider the taxes on the
processes and products of industry by which through the
civilized world public revenues are collected —
All these taxes violate the moral law. They take by
force what belongs to the individual alone; they give to
the unscrupulous an advantage over the scrupulous; they
have the effect, nay are largely intended, to increase
the price of what some have to sell and others must buy;
they corrupt government; they make oaths a mockery; they
shackle commerce; they fine industry and thrift; they
lessen the wealth that men might enjoy, and enrich some
by impoverishing others.
Yet what most strikingly shows how opposed to
Christianity is this system of raising public revenues is
its influence on thought.
Christianity teaches us that all men are brethren;
that their true interests are harmonious, not
antagonistic. It gives us, as the golden rule of life,
that we should do to others as we would have others do to
us. But out of the system of taxing the products and
processes of labor, and out of its effects in increasing
the price of what some have to sell and others must buy,
has grown the theory of “protection,” which
denies this gospel, which holds Christ ignorant of
political economy and proclaims laws of national
well-being utterly at variance with his teaching. This
theory sanctifies national hatreds; it inculcates a
universal war of hostile tariffs; it teaches peoples that
their prosperity lies in imposing on the productions of
other peoples restrictions they do not wish imposed on
their own; and instead of the Christian doctrine of
man’s brotherhood it makes injury of foreigners a
civic virtue.
“By their fruits ye shall know
them.” Can anything more clearly show that to tax
the products and processes of industry is not the way God
intended public revenues to be raised?
But to consider what we propose — the raising of
public revenues by a single tax on the value of land
irrespective of improvements — is to see that in
all respects this does conform to the moral law.
Let me ask your Holiness to keep in mind that the
value we propose to tax, the value of land irrespective
of improvements, does not come from any exertion of labor
or investment of capital on or in it — the values
produced in this way being values of improvement which we
would exempt. The value of land irrespective of
improvement is the value that attaches to land by reason
of increasing population and social progress. This is a
value that always goes to the owner as owner, and never
does and never can go to the user; for if the user be a
different person from the owner he must always pay the
owner for it in rent or in purchase-money; while if the
user be also the owner, it is as owner, not as user, that
he receives it, and by selling or renting the land he
can, as owner, continue to receive it after he ceases to
be a user.
Thus, taxes on land irrespective of improvement cannot
lessen the rewards of industry, nor add to prices,* nor
in any way take from the individual what belongs to the
individual. They can take only the value that attaches to
land by the growth of the community, and which therefore
belongs to the community as a whole.
* As to this point it may be well to add
that all economists are agreed that taxes on land
values irrespective of improvement or use — or
what in the terminology of political economy is styled
rent, a term distinguished from the ordinary use of the
word rent by being applied solely to payments for the
use of land itself — must be paid by the owner
and cannot be shifted by him on the user. To explain in
another way the reason given in the text: Price is not
determined by the will of the seller or the will of the
buyer, but by the equation of demand and supply, and
therefore as to things constantly demanded and
constantly produced rests at a point determined by the
cost of production — whatever tends to increase
the cost of bringing fresh quantities of such articles
to the consumer increasing price by checking supply,
and whatever tends to reduce such cost decreasing price
by increasing supply. Thus taxes on wheat or tobacco or
cloth add to the price that the consumer must pay, and
thus the cheapening in the cost of producing steel
which improved processes have made in recent years has
greatly reduced the price of steel. But land has no
cost of production, since it is created by God, not
produced by man. Its price therefore is fixed
—
1 (monopoly rent), where land is held
in close monopoly, by what the owners can extract
from the users under penalty of deprivation and
consequently of starvation, and amounts to all that
common labor can earn on it beyond what is necessary
to life;
2 (economic rent proper), where there is no special
monopoly, by what the particular land will yield to
common labor over and above what may be had by like
expenditure and exertion on land having no special
advantage and for which no rent is paid; and,
3 (speculative rent, which is a species of monopoly
rent, telling particularly in selling price), by the
expectation of future increase of value from social
growth and improvement, which expectation causing
landowners to withhold land at present prices has the
same effect as combination.
Taxes on land values or economic rent
can therefore never be shifted by the landowner to the
land-user, since they in no wise increase the demand
for land or enable landowners to check supply by
withholding land from use. Where rent depends on mere
monopolization, a case I mention because rent may in
this way be demanded for the use of land even before
economic or natural rent arises, the taking by taxation
of what the landowners were able to extort from labor
could not enable them to extort any more, since
laborers, if not left enough to live on, will die. So,
in the case of economic rent proper, to take from the
landowners the premiums they receive, would in no way
increase the superiority of their land and the demand
for it. While, so far as price is affected by
speculative rent, to compel the landowners to pay taxes
on the value of land whether they were getting any
income from it or not, would make it more difficult for
them to withhold land from use; and to tax the full
value would not merely destroy the power but the desire
to do so.
To take land values for the state, abolishing all
taxes on the products of labor, would therefore leave to
the laborer the full produce of labor; to the individual
all that rightfully belongs to the individual. It would
impose no burden on industry, no check on commerce, no
punishment on thrift; it would secure the largest
production and the fairest distribution of wealth, by
leaving men free to produce and to exchange as they
please, without any artificial enhancement of prices; and
by taking for public purposes a value that cannot be
carried off, that cannot be hidden, that of all values is
most easily ascertained and most certainly and cheaply
collected, it would enormously lessen the number of
officials, dispense with oaths, do away with temptations
to bribery and evasion, and abolish man-made crimes in
themselves innocent.
But, further: That God has intended the state
to obtain the revenues it needs by the taxation of land
values is shown by the same order and degree of evidence
that shows that God has intended the milk of the mother
for the nourishment of the babe.
See how close is the analogy. In that
primitive condition ere the need for the state arises
there are no land values. The products of labor have
value, but in the sparsity of population no value as yet
attaches to land itself. But as increasing density of
population and increasing elaboration of industry
necessitate the organization of the state, with its need
for revenues, value begins to attach to land. As
population still increases and industry grows more
elaborate, so the needs for public revenues increase. And
at the same time and from the same causes land values
increase. The connection is invariable.
The value of things produced by labor tends to decline
with social development, since the larger scale of
production and the improvement of processes tend steadily
to reduce their cost. But the value of land on which
population centers goes up and up. Take Rome or Paris or
London or New York or Melbourne. Consider the enormous
value of land in such cities as compared with the value
of land in sparsely settled parts of the same countries.
To what is this due? Is it not due to the density and
activity of the populations of those cities — to
the very causes that require great public expenditure for
streets, drains, public buildings, and all the many
things needed for the health, convenience and safety of
such great cities? See how with the growth of such cities
the one thing that steadily increases in value is land;
how the opening of roads, the building of railways, the
making of any public improvement, adds to the value of
land. Is it not clear that here is a natural law —
that is to say a tendency willed by the Creator? Can it
mean anything else than that He who ordained the state
with its needs has in the values which attach to land
provided the means to meet those needs?
That it does mean this and nothing else is
confirmed if we look deeper still, and inquire not merely
as to the intent, but as to the purpose of the intent. If
we do so we may see in this natural law by which land
values increase with the growth of society not only such
a perfectly adapted provision for the needs of society as
gratifies our intellectual perceptions by showing us the
wisdom of the Creator, but a purpose with regard to the
individual that gratifies our moral perceptions by
opening to us a glimpse of his beneficence.
Consider: Here is a natural law by which as
society advances the one thing that increases in value is
land — a natural law by virtue of which all growth
of population, all advance of the arts, all general
improvements of whatever kind, add to a fund that both
the commands of justice and the dictates of expediency
prompt us to take for the common uses of society.
Now, since increase in the fund available for the common
uses of society is increase in the gain that goes equally
to each member of society, is it not clear that the law
by which land values increase with social advance while
the value of the products of labor does not increase,
tends with the advance of civilization to make the share
that goes equally to each member of society more and more
important as compared with what goes to him from his
individual earnings, and thus to make the advance of
civilization lessen relatively the differences that in a
ruder social state must exist between the strong and the
weak, the fortunate and the unfortunate? Does it not show
the purpose of the Creator to be that the advance of man
in civilization should be an advance not merely to larger
powers but to a greater and greater equality, instead of
what we, by our ignoring of his intent, are making it, an
advance toward a more and more monstrous inequality?
...
That the value attaching to land with social growth is
intended for social needs is shown by the final proof.
God is indeed a jealous God in the sense that nothing but
injury and disaster can attend the effort of men to do
things other than in the way he has intended; in the
sense that where the blessings he proffers to men are
refused or misused they turn to evils that scourge us.
And just as for the mother to withhold the provision that
fills her breast with the birth of the child is to
endanger physical health, so for society to refuse to
take for social uses the provision intended for them is
to breed social disease.
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.
The Right Reverend Dr. Thomas Nulty, Bishop of Meath,
who sees all this as clearly as we do, in pointing out to
the clergy and laity of his diocese* the design of Divine
Providence that the rent of land should be taken for the
community, says:
I think, therefore, that I may fairly
infer, on the strength of authority as well as of
reason, that the people are and always must be the real
owners of the land of their country. This great social
fact appears to me to be of incalculable importance,
and it is fortunate, indeed, that on the strictest
principles of justice it is not clouded even by a
shadow of uncertainty or doubt. There is, moreover, a
charm and a peculiar beauty in the clearness with which
it reveals the wisdom and the benevolence of the
designs of Providence in the admirable provision he has
made for the wants and the necessities of that state of
social existence of which he is author, and in which
the very instincts of nature tell us we are to spend
our lives. A vast public property, a great national
fund, has been placed under the dominion and at the
disposal of the nation to supply itself abundantly with
resources necessary to liquidate the expenses of its
government, the administration of its laws and the
education of its youth, and to enable it to provide for
the suitable sustentation and support of its criminal
and pauper population. One of the most interesting
peculiarities of this property is that its value is
never stationary; it is constantly progressive and
increasing in a direct ratio to the growth of the
population, and the very causes thatincrease and
multiply the demands made on it increase
proportionately its ability to meet them.
* Letter addressed to the Clergy and Laity of the
Diocese of Meath, Ireland, April 2, 1881.
There is, indeed, as Bishop Nulty says, a
peculiar beauty in the clearness with which the wisdom
and benevolence of Providence are revealed in this great
social fact, the provision made for the common needs of
society in what economists call the law of rent.
Of all the evidence that natural religion gives, it is
this that most clearly shows the existence of a
beneficent God, and most conclusively silences the doubts
that in our days lead so many to
materialism.
For in this beautiful provision made by natural law
for the social needs of civilization we see that God has
intended civilization; that all our discoveries and
inventions do not and cannot outrun his forethought, and
that steam, electricity and labor-saving appliances only
make the great moral laws clearer and more important. In
the growth of this great fund, increasing with social
advance — a fund that accrues from the growth of
the community and belongs therefore to the community
— we see not only that there is no need for the
taxes that lessen wealth, that engender corruption, that
promote inequality and teach men to deny the gospel; but
that to take this fund for the purpose for which it was
evidently intended would in the highest civilization
secure to all the equal enjoyment of God’s bounty,
the abundant opportunity to satisfy their wants, and
would provide amply for every legitimate need of the
state. We see that God in his dealings with men has not
been a bungler or a niggard; that he has not brought too
many men into the world; that he has not neglected
abundantly to supply them; that he has not intended that
bitter competition of the masses for a mere animal
existence and that monstrous aggregation of wealth which
characterize our civilization; but that these evils which
lead so many to say there is no God, or yet more
impiously to say that they are of God’s ordering,
are due to our denial of his moral law. We see that the
law of justice, the law of the Golden Rule, is not a mere
counsel of perfection, but indeed the law of social life.
We see that if we were only to observe it there would be
work for all, leisure for all, abundance for all; and
that civilization would tend to give to the poorest not
only necessities, but all comforts and reasonable
luxuries as well. We see that Christ was not a mere
dreamer when he told men that if they would seek the
kingdom of God and its right-doing they might no more
worry about material things than do the lilies of the
field about their raiment; but that he was only declaring
what political economy in the light of modern discovery
shows to be a sober truth. ...
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. ...
... We differ from the socialists in our diagnosis of
the evil and we differ from them as to remedies. We have
no fear of capital, regarding it as the natural
handmaiden of labor; we look on interest in itself as
natural and just; we would set no limit to accumulation,
nor impose on the rich any burden that is not equally
placed on the poor; we see no evil in competition, but
deem unrestricted competition to be as necessary to the
health of the industrial and social organism as the free
circulation of the blood is to the health of the bodily
organism — to be the agency whereby the fullest
cooperation is to be secured. We would simply take for
the community what belongs to the community, the value
that attaches to land by the growth of the community;
leave sacredly to the individual all that belongs to the
individual; and, treating necessary monopolies as
functions of the state, abolish all restrictions and
prohibitions save those required for public health,
safety, morals and convenience.
But the fundamental difference — the difference
I ask your Holiness specially to note, is in this:
socialism in all its phases looks on the evils of our
civilization as springing from the inadequacy or
inharmony of natural relations, which must be
artificially organized or improved. In its idea there
devolves on the state the necessity of intelligently
organizing the industrial relations of men; the
construction, as it were, of a great machine whose
complicated parts shall properly work together under the
direction of human intelligence. This is the reason why
socialism tends toward atheism. Failing to see the order
and symmetry of natural law, it fails to recognize
God.
On the other hand, we who call
ourselves single-tax men (a name which expresses merely
our practical propositions) see in the social and
industrial relations of men not a machine which requires
construction, but an organism which needs only to be
suffered to grow. We see in the natural social and
industrial laws such harmony as we see in the adjustments
of the human body, and that as far transcends the power
of man’s intelligence to order and direct as it is
beyond man’s intelligence to order and direct the
vital movements of his frame. We see in these social and
industrial laws so close a relation to the moral law as
must spring from the same Authorship, and that proves the
moral law to be the sure guide of man where his
intelligence would wander and go astray. Thus, to us, all
that is needed to remedy the evils of our time is to do
justice and give freedom. This is the reason why our
beliefs tend toward, nay are indeed the only beliefs
consistent with a firm and reverent faith in God, and
with the recognition of his law as the supreme law which
men must follow if they would secure prosperity and avoid
destruction. This is the reason why to us
political economy only serves to show the depth of wisdom
in the simple truths which common people heard gladly
from the lips of Him of whom it was said with wonder,
“Is not this the Carpenter of Nazareth?”
And it is because that in what we propose — the
securing to all men of equal natural opportunities for
the exercise of their powers and the removal of all legal
restriction on the legitimate exercise of those powers
— we see the conformation of human law to the moral
law, that we hold with confidence that this is not merely
the sufficient remedy for all the evils you so strikingly
portray, but that it is the only possible remedy.
Nor is there any other. The organization of man is
such, his relations to the world in which he is placed
are such — that is to say, the immutable laws of
God are such, that it is beyond the power of human
ingenuity to devise any way by which the evils born of
the injustice that robs men of their birthright can be
removed otherwise than by doing justice, by opening to
all the bounty that God has provided for all.
Since man can live only on land and from land, since
land is the reservoir of matter and force from which
man’s body itself is taken, and on which he must
draw for all that he can produce, does it not
irresistibly follow that to give the land in ownership to
some men and to deny to others all right to it is to
divide mankind into the rich and the poor, the privileged
and the helpless? Does it not follow that those who have
no rights to the use of land can live only by selling
their power to labor to those who own the land? Does it
not follow that what the socialists call “the iron
law of wages,” what the political economists term
“the tendency of wages to a minimum,” must
take from the landless masses — the mere laborers,
who of themselves have no power to use their labor
— all the benefits of any possible advance or
improvement that does not alter this unjust division of
land? For having no power to employ themselves, they
must, either as labor-sellers or as land-renters, compete
with one another for permission to labor. This
competition with one another of men shut out from
God’s inexhaustible storehouse has no limit but
starvation, and must ultimately force wages to their
lowest point, the point at which life can just be
maintained and reproduction carried on. ...
And in taking for the uses of society what we
clearly see is the great fund intended for society in the
divine order, 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 by virtue of beautiful
adaptations in the economic laws of the Creator, it is
impossible for any one honestly to acquire wealth,
without at the same time adding to the wealth of the
world.
To persist in a wrong, to refuse to undo it, is always
to become involved in other wrongs. Those who defend
private property in land, and thereby deny the first and
most important of all human rights, the equal right to
the material substratum of life, are compelled to one of
two courses. Either they must, as do those whose gospel
is “Devil take the hindermost,” deny the
equal right to life, and by some theory like that to
which the English clergyman Malthus has given his name,
assert that nature (they do not venture to say God)
brings into the world more men than there is provision
for; or, they must, as do the socialists, assert as
rights what in themselves are wrongs.... read the whole
letter
Henry George: Thy
Kingdom Come (1889 speech)
... That the intelligence which we must recognise
behind nature is almighty does not mean that it can
contradict itself and stultify its own laws. No; we are
the children of God. But what God is, who shall say? But
everyone is conscious of this, that behind what one sees
there must have been a power to bring that forth; that
behind what one knows there is an intelligence far
greater than that which is lodged in the human mind, but
which human intelligence does in some infinitely less
degree resemble. ...
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.
...
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.
One cannot look, it seems to me,
through nature — whether one looks at the stars
through a telescope, or have the microscope reveal to one
those worlds that we find in drops of water. Whether one
considers the human frame, the adjustments of the animal
kingdom, or any department of physical nature, one must see
that there has been a contriver and adjuster, that there
has been an intent. So strong is that feeling, so natural
is it to our minds, that even people who deny the Creative
Intelligence are forced, in spite of themselves, to talk of
intent; the claws on one animal were intended, we say, to
climb with, the fins of another to propel it through the
water.
Yet, while in looking through the
laws of physical nature, we find
intelligence we do not so clearly find beneficence. But in
the great social fact that as
population increases, and improvements are made, and men
progress in civilisation, the one thing that rises
everywhere in value is land, and in this we may see a proof
of the beneficence of the Creator.
Why, consider what it means! It means
that the social laws are adapted to progressive humanity!
In a rude state of society where there is no need for
common expenditure, there is no value attaching to land.
The only value which attaches there is to things produced
by labour. But as civilisation goes on, as a division of
labour takes place, as people come into centres, so do the
common wants increase, and so does the necessity for public
revenue arise. And so in that value which attaches to land,
not by reason of anything the individual does, but by
reason of the growth of the community, is a provision
intended — we may safely say intended — to meet
that social want.
Just as society grows, so do
the common needs grow, and so grows this value attaching to
land — the provided fund from which they can be
supplied. Here is a value that may be taken, without
impairing the right of property, without taking anything
from the producer, without lessening the natural rewards of
industry and thrift. Nay, here is a value that must be
taken if we would prevent the most monstrous of all
monopolies. What does all this mean? It means that
in the creative plan, the natural advance in civilisation
is an advance to a greater and greater equality instead of
to a more and more monstrous inequality.
... Read
the whole speech
Henry George: The Land Question
(1881)
I doubt not that whichever way a man
may turn to inquire of Nature, he will come upon
adjustments which will arouse not merely his wonder, but
his gratitude. Yet what has most impressed
me with the feeling that the laws of Nature are the laws of
beneficent intelligence is what I see of the social
possibilities involved in the law of rent. Rent
(4)
springs from natural causes. It
arises, as society develops, from the differences in
natural opportunities and the differences in the
distribution of population. It increases with the division
of labor, with the advance of the arts, with the progress
of invention. And thus, by virtue of a law impressed upon
the very nature of things, has the Creator provided that
the natural advance of mankind shall be an advance toward
equality, an advance toward cooperation, an advance toward
a social state in which not even the weakest need be
crowded to the wall, in which even for the unfortunate and
the cripple there may be ample provision. For this revenue,
which arises from the common property, which represents not
the creation of value by the individual, but the creation
by the community as a whole, which increases just as
society develops, affords a common fund, which, properly
used, tends constantly to equalize conditions, to open the
largest opportunities for all, and utterly to banish want
or the fear of want.
(4)
I, of course, use the word in its economic, not in its
common sense, meaning by it what is commonly called
ground-rent. ... read
the whole article
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
Clarence Darrow: The Land Belongs To The
People (1916)
If we could imagine some wise being somewhere in the
clouds, looking down upon the earth and seeing men with
their manner of life and their devious activities, we
could imagine that such a being would not look upon man
with the same reverence and respect with which man looks
upon himself. Such a being would see great spaces of
vacant land, hundreds of miles, without any population,
miles and miles of fertile land with no people living on
it, and would look into great huddles of men in our big
cities and find a busy hive of men and women working,
fighting, toiling, stealing, living five, six, ten,
twenty stories up in the air, because there is not room
enough on earth! He would look at man with all his goings
and his comings and wonder what sort of brain he has; he
would look at him and consider him far inferior to the
ant who organizes his hill with system and plan and
purpose so that all may live.
He would think man did not understand the science of
social life as well as the bee who builds his home so
that all the bees may live and all have substantially the
same chance for life. And such a being would doubtless
wonder whether man was really worth while to bother with
or to save, and would probably respect that portion of
the apes who refuse to evolve into men. He certainly
could not understand how man, with his method of life,
his warfare upon his fellows, his ill adjustments, could
claim to be the wisest and the best and the greatest and
the most worth while of all the animals that live upon
the earth.
This earth is a little raft moving in the endless sea
of space, and the mass of its human inhabitants are
hanging on as best they can. It is as if some raft filled
with shipwrecked sailors should be floating on the ocean,
and a few of the strongest and most powerful would take
all the raft they could get and leave the most of the
people, especially the ones who did the work, hanging to
the edges by their eyebrows. These men who have taken
possession of this raft, this little planet in this
endless space, are not even content with taking all there
is and leaving the rest barely enough to hold onto, but
they think so much of themselves and their brief day that
while they live they must make rules and laws and
regulations that parcel out the earth for thousands of
years after they are dead and, gone, so that their
descendants and others of their kind may do in the tenth
generation exactly what they are doing today —
keeping the earth and all the good things of the earth
and compelling the great mass of mankind to toil for
them.
Now, the question is, how are you going to get it
back? ... read
the whole article
Weld Carter: A
Clarion Call to Sanity, to Honesty, to Justice
Our stage, of course, for making this study will be
this world of ours, for it is upon this world that the
drama of human living is played out, with all its joys
and all its sorrows, with all its great achievements and
all its failures, with all its nobilities and all its
wickedness.
Regardless of its size relative to other planets, with
its circumference of about twenty-five thousand miles, to
any mere mortal who must walk to the station and back
each day, it is huge. Roughly ninety-six million miles
separate the sun from the earth on the latter's eliptical
journey around the sun. At this distance, the earth makes
its annual journey in its elliptical curve and it spins
on its own canted axis. Because of this cant, the sun's
rays are distributed far more evenly, thus minimizing
their damage and maximizing their benefits.
Consider the complementarity of nature in the case of
the two forms of life we call vegetable and animal, in
their respective uses of the two gases, oxygen and carbon
dioxide, the waste product of each serving as the
life-giving force of the other. Any increase in the one
will encourage a like response in the other.
Marvel at the manner in which nature, with no help
from man or beast, delivers pure water to the highest
lands, increasing it as to their elevation, thus
affording us a free ride downstream and free power as we
desire it. Look with awe at the variety and quantity of
minerals with which this world is blessed, and finally at
the fecundity nature has bestowed so lavishly throughout
both animal and vegetable life: Take note of the number
of corn kernels from a single stalk that can be grown
next year from a single kernel of this year's crop; then
think of the vastly greater yields from a single cherry
pit or the seeds of a single apple, or grape or
watermelon; or, turning to the animal world, consider the
hen who averages almost an egg a day and the spawning
fish as examples of the prolificacy that is evident
throughout the whole of the animal world, including
mankind.
If this marvelous earth is as rich in resources as
portrayed in the foregoing paragraph, then the problem
must be one of distribution:
- how is the land distributed among the earth's
inhabitants, and
- how are its products in turn distributed?
Land is universally treated as either public property
or private property. Wars are fought over land. Nowhere
is it treated as common property.
George has described this world as a "well-provisioned
ship" and when one considers the increasingly huge daily
withdrawals of such provisions as coal and petroleum as
have occurred say over the past one hundred years, one
must but agree with this writer. But this is only a
static view. Consider the suggestion of some ten years
ago that it would require the conversion of less than 20%
the of the current annual growth of wood into alcohol to
fuel all the motors then being fueled by the
then-conventional means. The dynamic picture of the
future is indeed awesome, and there is every indication
that that characteristic has the potential of endless
expansion. So how is it that on so richly endowed a
Garden of Eden as this world of ours we have only been
able to make of it a hell on earth for vast numbers of
people? ... Read the whole
essay
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
OR let him go to Edinburgh, the "modern Athens," of
which Scotsmen speak with pride, and in buildings from
whose roofs a bowman might strike the spires of twenty
churches he will find human beings living as he would not
keep his meanest dog. Let him toil up the stairs of one
of those monstrous buildings, let him enter one of those
"dark houses," let him close the door, and in the
blackness think what life must be in such a place. Then
let him try the reduction to iniquity. And if he go to
that good charity (but, alas! how futile is Charity
without Justice!) where little children are kept while
their mothers are at work, and children are fed who would
otherwise go hungry, he may see infants whose limbs are
shrunken from want of nourishment. Perhaps they may tell
him, as they told me, of that little girl, barefooted,
ragged, and hungry, who, when they gave her bread, raised
her eyes and clasped her hands, and thanked our Father in
Heaven for His bounty to her. They who told me that never
dreamed, I think, of its terrible meaning. But I ask the
Duke of Argyll, did that little child, thankful for that
poor dole, get what our Father provided for her? Is He so
niggard? If not, what is it, who is it, that stands,
between such children and our Father's bounty? If it be
an institution, is it not our duty to God and to our
neighbor to rest not till we destroy it? If it be a man,
were it not better for him that a millstone were hanged
about his neck and he were cast into the depths of the
sea? — The Reduction to Iniquity (a reply to the
Duke of Argyll), The Nineteenth Century, July, 1884
WE are so accustomed to poverty that even in the most
advanced countries we regard it as the natural lot of the
great masses of the people; that we take it as a matter
of course that even in our highest civilization large
classes should want the necessaries of healthful life,
and the vast majority should only get a poor and pinched
living by the hardest toil. There are professors of
political economy who teach that this condition of things
is the result of social laws of which it is idle to
complain! There are ministers of religion who preach that
this is the condition which an all-wise, all-powerful
Creator intended for His children! If an architect were
to build a theater so that not more than one-tenth of the
audience could see and hear, we should call him a bungler
and a botcher. If a man were to give a feast and provide
so little food that nine-tenths of his guests must go
away hungry, we should call him a fool, or worse. Yet so
accustomed are we to poverty, that even the preachers of
what passes for Christianity tell us that the great
Architect of the Universe, to whose infinite skill all
nature testifies, has made such a botch job of this world
that the vast majority of the human creatures whom He has
called into it are condemned by the conditions he has
imposed to want, suffering, and brutalizing toil that
gives no opportunity for the development of mental powers
— must pass their lives in a hard struggle to
merely live! — Social Problems
THE tax upon land values is the most just and equal of
all taxes. It falls only upon those who receive from
society a peculiar and valuable benefit, and upon them in
proportion to the benefit they receive. It is the taking
by the community, for the use of the community, of that
value which is the creation of the community. It is the
application of the common property to common uses. When
all rent is taken by taxation for the needs of the
community, then will the equality ordained by nature be
attained. No citizen will have an advantage over any
other citizen save as is given by his industry, skill,
and intelligence; and each will obtain what he fairly
earns. Then, but not till then, will labor get its full
reward, and capital its natural return. — Progress
& Poverty — Book VIII, Chapter 3, Application
of the Remedy: The Proposition Tried by the Canons of
Taxation
HERE is a provision made by natural law for the
increasing needs of social growth; here is an adaptation
of nature by virtue of which the natural progress of
society is a progress toward equality not toward
inequality; a centripetal force tending to unity growing
out of and ever balancing a centrifugal force tending to
diversity. Here is a fund belonging to society as a
whole, from which without the degradation of alms,
private or public, provision can be made for the weak,
the helpless, the aged; from which provision can be made
for the common wants of all as a matter of common right
to each. — Social Problems — Chapter 19, The
First Great Reform
NOT only do all economic considerations point to a tax
on land values as the proper source of public revenues;
but so do all British traditions. A land tax of four
shillings in the pound of rental value is still nominally
enforced in England, but being levied on a valuation made
in the reign of William III, it amounts in reality to not
much over a penny in the pound. With the abolition of
indirect taxation this is the tax to which men would
naturally turn. The resistance of landholders would bring
up the question of title, and thus any movement which
went so far as to propose the substitution of direct for
indirect taxation must inevitably end in a demand for the
restoration to the British people of their birthright.
— Protection or Free Trade— Chapter 27: The
Lion in the Way - econlib
THE feudal system, which is not peculiar to Europe but
seems to be the natural result of the conquest of a
settled country by a race among whom equality and
individuality are yet strong, clearly recognized, in
theory at least, that the land belongs to society at
large, not to the individual. Rude outcome of an age in
which might stood for right as nearly as it ever can (for
the idea of right is ineradicable from the human mind,
and must in some shape show itself even in the
association of pirates and robbers), the feudal system
yet admitted in no one the uncontrolled and exclusive
right to land. A fief was essentially a a trust, and to
enjoyment was annexed obligation. The sovereign,
theoretically the representative of the collective power
and rights of the whole people, was in feudal view the
only absolute owner of land. And though land was granted
to individual possession, yet in its possession were
involved duties, by which the enjoyer of its revenues was
supposed to render back to the commonwealth an equivalent
for the benefits which from the delegation of the common
right he received. — Progress &Poverty —
Book VII, Chapter 4, Justice of the Remedy: Private
Property in Land Historically Considered
THE abolition of the military tenures in England by
the Long Parliament, ratified after the accession of
Charles II, though simply an appropriation of public
revenues by the feudal landowners, who thus got rid of
the consideration on which they held the common property
of the nation, and saddled it on the people at large in
the taxation of all consumers, has been long
characterized, and is still held up in the law books, as
a triumph of the spirit of freedom. Yet here is the
source of the immense debt and heavy taxation of England.
Had the form of these feudal dues been simply changed
into one better adapted to the changed times, English
wars need never have occasioned the incurring of debt to
the amount of a single pound, and the labor and capital
of England need not have been taxed a single farthing for
the maintenance of a military establishment. All this
would have come from rent, which the landholders since
that time have appropriated to themselves — from
the tax which land ownership levies on the earnings of
labor and capital. The landholders of England got their
land on terms which required them even in the sparse
population of Norman days to put in the field, upon call,
sixty thousand perfectly equipped horsemen, and on the
further condition of various fines and incidents which
amounted to a considerable part of the rent. It would
probably be a low estimate to put the pecuniary value of
these various services and dues at one-half the rental
value of the land. Had the landholders been kept to this
contract and no land been permitted to be inclosed except
upon similar terms, the income accruing to the nation
from English land would today be greater by many millions
than the entire public revenues of the United Kingdom.
England today might have enjoyed absolute free trade.
There need not have been a customs duty, an excise,
license or income tax, yet all the present expenditures
could be met, and a large surplus remain to be devoted to
any purpose which would conduce to the comfort or
well-being of the whole people. — Progress
&Poverty — Book VII, Chapter 4, Justice of the
Remedy: Private Property in Land Historically
Considered
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