Liberation Theology
Do you know what mercedes means?
Read on!
a synopsis of Robert V. Andelson and James M. Dawsey:
From Wasteland to
Promised land: Liberation Theology for a Post-Marxist
World
The point of departure of liberation theology is
the recognition of the awful fact that millions lead
subhuman lives. The rural landless seek refuge in cities,
often becoming squatters in barrios or favelas with open sewage and no safe water
supply. They may earn fifteen dollars a month if they
find work at all. Children live in the streets and go to
bed hungry. Illness and drought, and even complaining of
their lot, may lead to premature death. And they can see
the Mercedes behind the iron gates of walled mansions.
(Ironically, mercedes is also a
Spanish legal term denoting title to a large grant of
land.) Like poor Lazarus in the parable of Jesus (Luke
16:19-31), they survive on the crumbs that fall from the
rich man's table. When judgement comes to the rich man,
he receives no mercy because he had shown
none.
... Even today many practicing Roman Catholics
approach carnival as a temporary
relief from suffering -- a reality that was present
yesterday and will be here tomorrow, always. In this
sense, carnival is escapism --
for a few days. Then real life continues.
...
The origins of this suffering are clearly to be
found in the aristocratic system imposed by papal bull
and the armed might of Spain and Portugal, a system that
relegated the indigenous Indian population to a life of
slavery, at best. In Inter Caeteris, Pope Alexander VI
designated King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella "lords and
masters" of the New World. Thus were the treasure stores
of gold and silver, and later coffee and beef, thrown
open -- to a well-defined elite.
The encomienda was the basic instrument used by
the Spanish empire for settling Latin America. This was a
grant of Indians to an encomendero who assumed the
obligation, in principle, of Christianizing and
civilizing them. The Indians, "in exchange", were
required to provide labor and tribute to Spain.
...
However, religious works cannot avoid their
political context (an insight of the liberation
theologians). Although in theory the encomienda was not a grant of land, in
practice many of the encomienderos were also granted mercedes, or legal title to vast tracts that
gave rise to the late estates. After the encomienda system was abolished, this control
of land allowed the economic exploitation of the natives
to continue.
Two types of large landed estates survive to this
day from the colonial period:
- the hacienda (or
fazenda, in Portuguese), raising
cattle and a diversity of crops for local use or sale;
and
- the plantation, raising a single exportable
crop.
Initially, Indians were given as slaves to the
landholders. Later, the "freed" natives were tied to the
landowners through debts brought on by a subsistence wage
system. The shortage of good land off the estate made it
easy for the landlord to attract or coerce labor onto his
estate.
This pattern continues today with an underclass
largely descended from the Indian and African slaves,
along with other dispossessed groups. The haciendas and
plantations are noted for their inefficient husbandry.
Landowners face few social or economic pressures to
become good managers, and often live in the cities
leaving the estates to be run by overseers. Consequently,
the landowners often do not make large profits, but that
is not their objective. Their primary
concern is the maintenance of the two paramount features
of the status quo, which go hand in hand.
- First, labor is very cheap, because workers
have no alternative place to employ themselves, even
though massive tracts of good land are held nearly idle
by the land barons.
- Second, the cost of holding on to huge estates
-- i.e., the taxes charged by the public for the
privilege of retaining possession -- are low or
effectively nonexistent.
Strong incentives for good stewardship are as
absent as the landlords.
There is also little incentive to productivity;
most of the population has no share in the fruits of the
land or the profits of the estates.
...
Indeed, the primary purpose of holding vast
amounts of land, as Andre Gunder Frank writes in
On Capitalist Underdevelopment,
"is not to use it but to prevent its use by others. These
others, denied access to the primary resource,
necessarily fall under the domination of the few who do
control it. And then they are exploited in all
conceivable ways, typically through low wages."
...
Effective land reform in Latin
America, as elsewhere, has scarcely taken
place.
- One of the major obstacles is
that many governments are run or controlled by a powerful
elite that owns the most valuable land, and often retards
and corrupts the reform process.
- Foreign enterprises also fight the reforms by
threatening to withdraw their investments.
- They are aided by fiscally conservative
politicians who argue that stability is necessary for
economic development, even at the expense of ignoring the
exploitation of the poor, who are poorly represented in
the political process.
- And the few that have been enacted have been
plagued by a host of problems, and often merely
reposition the former landowners, thanks to compensation
for expropriated lands, as the new monopolists of trade
and money lending, able to renew their exploitation of
the poor.
Turning to their religious
heritage for answers to severe injustice and suffering
due to land monopoly seems natural to liberation
theologians and their followers. In the Bible, the
Promised Land is characterized by the "eminent domain" of
God. The abundance of the land comes with the recognition
that the earth is the Lord's. Otherwise, we continue in
the Wasteland.
To recognize that "the earth is the Lord's" is to
see that the same God who established communities has
also in his providence ordained for them, through the
land itself, a just source of revenue. Yet, in the
Wasteland in which we live, this revenue goes mainly into
the pockets of monopolists, while communities meet their
needs by extorting individuals the fruits of their honest
toil. If ever there were any doubt that structural sin
exists, our present system of taxation is the proof.
Everywhere we see governments penalizing individuals for
their industry and creativity, while the socially
produced value of land is reaped by speculators in exact
proportion to the land which they withhold. The greater
the Wasteland, the greater the reward. Does this comport
with any divine plan, or notion of justice and human
rights? Or does it not, rather, perpetuate the Wasteland
and prevent the realization of the Promised
Land?
This not meant to suggest that land monopolists
and speculators have a corner on acquisitiveness or the
"profit motive," which is a well-nigh universal fact of
human nature. As a group, they are no more sinful than
are people at large, except to the degree that they
knowingly obstruct reforms aimed at removing the basis of
exploitation. Many abide by the dictum: "If one has to
live under a corrupt system, it is better to be a
beneficiary than a victim of it."
But they do not have to live under a corrupt
system; no one does. The profit motive can be channeled
in ways that are socially desirable as well as in ways
that are socially destructive. Let us give testimony to
our faith that the earth is the Lord's by building a
social order in which there are no victims.
Read the whole synopsis
James Kiefer: James Huntington and the
ideas of Henry George
Henry George, author of Progress and Poverty,
argued that, while some forms of wealth are produced by
human activity, and are rightly the property of the
producers (or those who have obtained them from the
previous owners by voluntary gift or exchange), land
and natural resources are bestowed by God on the human
race, and that every one of the N inhabitants of the
earth has a claim to 1/Nth of the coal beds, 1/Nth of
the oil wells, 1/Nth of the mines, and 1/Nth of the
fertile soil. God wills a society where everyone may
sit in peace under his own vine and his own fig
tree.
The Law of Moses undertook to implement this by
making the ownership of land hereditary, with a man's
land divided among his sons (or, in the absence of
sons, his daughters), and prohibiting the permanent
sale of land. (See Leviticus 25:13-17,23.) The most a
man might do with his land is sell the use of it until
the next Jubilee year, an amnesty declared once every
fifty years, when all debts were cancelled and all land
returned to its hereditary owner.
Henry George's proposed implementation is to tax all
land at about 99.99% of its rental value, leaving the
owner of record enough to cover his bookkeeping
expenses. The resulting revenues would be divided
equally among the natural owners of the land, viz. the
people of the country, with everyone receiving a
dividend check regularly for the use of his share of
the earth (here I am anticipating what I think George
would have suggested if he had written in the 1990's
rather than the 1870's).
This procedure would have the effect of making the
sale price of a piece of land, not including the price
of buildings and other improvements on it, practically
zero. The cost of being a landholder would be, not the
original sale price, but the tax, equivalent to rent. A
man who chose to hold his "fair share," or 1/Nth of all
the land, would pay a land tax about equal to his
dividend check, and so would break even. By 1/Nth of
the land is meant land with a value equal to 1/Nth of
the value of all the land in the country.
Naturally, an acre in the business district of a
great city would be worth as much as many square miles
in the open country. Some would prefer to hold more
than one N'th of the land and pay for the privilege.
Some would prefer to hold less land, or no land at all,
and get a small annual check representing the dividend
on their inheritance from their father Adam.
Note that, at least for the able-bodied, this solves
the problem of poverty at a stroke. If the total land
and total labor of the world are enough to feed and
clothe the existing population, then 1/Nth of the land
and 1/Nth of the labor are enough to feed and clothe
1/Nth of the population. A family of 4 occupying 4/Nths
of the land (which is what their dividend checks will
enable them to pay the tax on) will find that their
labor applied to that land is enough to enable them to
feed and clothe themselves. Of course, they may prefer
to apply their labor elsewhere more profitably, but the
situation from which we start is one in which everyone
has his own plot of ground from which to wrest a living
by the strength of his own back, and any deviation from
this is the result of voluntary exchanges agreed to by
the parties directly involved, who judge themselves to
be better off as the result of the exchanges.
Some readers may think this a very radical proposal.
In fact, it is extremely conservative, in the sense of
being in agreement with historic ideas about land
ownership as opposed to ownership of, say, tools or
vehicles or gold or domestic animals or other movables.
The laws of English-speaking countries uniformly
distinguish between real property (land) and personal
property (everything else). In this context, "real" is
not the opposite of "imaginary." It is a form of the
word "royal," and means that the ultimate owner of the
land is the king, as symbol of the people. Note that
English-derived law does not recognize "landowners."
The term is "landholders." The concept of eminent
domain is that the landholder may be forced to
surrender his landholdings to the government for a
public purpose. Historically, eminent domain does not
apply to property other than land, although
complications arise when there are buildings on the
land that is being seized.
I will mention in passing that the proposals of
Henry George have attracted support from persons as
diverse as Felix Morley, Aldous Huxley, Woodrow
Wilson, Helen Keller, Winston Churchill,
Leo Tolstoy, William F Buckley Jr, and Sun
Yat-sen. To the Five Nobel Prizes authorized by Alfred
Nobel himself there has been added a sixth, in
Economics, and the Henry George Foundation claims
eight of the Economics
Laureates as supporters, in whole or in part, of
the proposals of Henry George (Paul Samuelson, 1970;
Milton Friedman, 1976;
Herbert A Simon, 1978; James Tobin, 1981; Franco
Modigliani, 1985; James M Buchanan, 1986; Robert M
Solow, 1987; William S
Vickrey, 1996).
The immediate concrete proposal favored by most
Georgists today is that cities shall tax land within
their boundaries at a higher rate than they tax
buildings and other improvements on the land. (In case
anyone is about to ask, "How can we possibly
distinguish between the value of the land and the value
of the buildings on it?" let me assure you that real
estate assessors do it all the time. It is standard
practice to make the two assessments separately, and a
parcel of land in the business district of a large city
very often has a different owner from the building on
it.) Many cities have moved to a system of taxing land
more heavily than improvements, and most have been
pleased with the results, finding that landholders are
more likely to use their land productively -- to their
own benefit and that of the public -- if their taxes do
not automatically go up when they improve their land by
constructing or maintaining buildings on it.
An advantage of this proposal in the eyes of many is
that it is a Fabian proposal, "evolution, not
revolution," that it is incremental and reversible. If
a city or other jurisdiction does not like the results
of a two-level tax system, it can repeal the
arrangement or reduce the difference in levels with no
great upheaval. It is not like some other proposals of
the form, "Distribute all wealth justly, and make me
absolute dictator of the world so that I can supervise
the distribution, and if it doesn't work, I promise to
resign." The problem is that absolute dictators seldom
resign. ... read the whole
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related
themes:
the earth is
the Lord's,
equality,
created
equal,
natural
opportunities,
importance of
land,
God's eldest
sons,
land
as God's provisioning,
rent
as God's provisioning,
slavery,
equity for
the landless,
landless,
all
benefits...,
a society with no
victims,
desperado
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