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Piracy
Henry George: The Land Question (1881)
Is it not but yesterday that in the freest and
greatest republic on earth, among the people who boast
that they lead the very van of civilization, this
doctrine of vested rights was deemed a sufficient
justification for all the cruel wrongs of human slavery?
Is it not but yesterday when whoever dared to say that
the rights of property did not justly attach to human
beings; when whoever dared to deny that human beings
could be rightfully bought and sold like cattle–the
husband torn from the wife and the child from the mother;
when whoever denied the right of whoever had paid his
money for him to work or whip his own nigger was looked
upon as a wicked assailant of the rights of property? Is
it not but yesterday when in the South whoever whispered
such a thought took his life in his hands; when in the
North the abolitionist was held by the churches as worse
than an infidel, was denounced by the politicians and
rotten-egged by the mob? I was born in a Northern State,
I have never lived in the South, I am not yet gray; but I
well remember, as every American of middle age must
remember, how over and over again I have heard all
questionings of slavery silenced by the declaration that
the negroes were the property of their masters, and
that to take away a man's slave without
payment was as much a crime as to take away his horse
without payment. And whoever does not remember that far
back, let him look over American literature previous to
the war, and say whether, if the business of piracy had
been a flourishing business, it would have lacked
defenders? Let him say whether any proposal to stop the
business of piracy without compensating the pirates would
not have been denounced at first as a proposal to set
aside vested rights? ... read
the whole article
Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and Charts (1894)
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.
...
Read the entire
article
Clarence Darrow: How to Abolish Unfair Taxation (1913) Everybody nowadays is anxious to help do something for the poor, especially they who are on the backs of the poor; they will do anything that is not fundamental. Nobody ever dreams of giving the poor a chance to help themselves. The reformers in this state have passed a law prohibiting women from working more than eight hours in one day in certain industries — so much do women love to work that they must be stopped by law. If any benevolent heathen see fit to come here and do work, we send them to gaol or send them back where they came from. All these prohibitory laws are froth. You can only cure effects by curing the cause. Every sin and every wrong that exists in the world is the product of law, and you cannot cure it without curing the cause. Lawyers, as a class, are very stupid. What would you think of a doctor, who, finding a case of malaria, instead of draining the swamp, would send the patient to gaol, and leave the swamp where it is? We are seeking to improve conditions of life by improving symptoms. Land Basic No man created the earth, but to a large extent all take from the earth a portion of it and mould it into useful things for the use of man. Without land man cannot live; without access to it man cannot labor. First of all, he must have the earth, and this he cannot have access to until the single tax is applied. It has been proven by the history of the human race that the single tax does work, and that it will work as its advocates claim. For instance, man turned from Europe, filled with a population of the poor, and discovered the great continent of America. Here, when he could not get profitable employment, he went on the free land and worked for himself, and in those early days there were no problems of poverty, no wonderfully rich and no extremely poor — because there was cheap land. Men could go to work for themselves, and thus take the surplus off the labor market. There were no beggars in the early days. It was only when the landlord got in his work — when the earth monopoly was complete — that the great mass of men had to look to a boss for a job. All the remedial laws on earth can scarcely help the poor when the earth is monopolized. Men must live from the earth, they must till the soil, dig the coal and iron and cut down the forest. Wise men know it, and cunning men know it, and so a few have reached out their hands and grasped the earth; and they say, "These mines of coal and iron, which it took nature ages and ages to store, belong to me; and no man can touch them until he sees fit to pay the tribute I demand". Pirates Demand Tribute Nature prepared the earth for ages to make a mine of iron ore, which is so useful in civilized life. It was here before man came, and will be here after he is gone, and yet a plundering, soulless, conscienceless band of pirates, called the steel trust, have taken possession of all the iron in America, and they say to every man who will use it: "You must pay us tribute." And every time two dollars is paid for their product one dollar goes to labor, and one dollar is taken as plunder pure and simple, because of the foolish laws of man. They can take from the farmer and laborer all that they earn except enough to keep them alive still to toil for the monopolist. You may make eight-hour laws, you may make laws regulating sweat shops and factories, but so long as a few rich men own the earth, there will be a few rich and many millions of helpless poor. As population becomes more dense, the proportion of poor will increase. ... read the whole speech
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