Small Towns
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of Natural
Taxation, from Principles of Natural Taxation
(1917)
Q54. What relief could it bring to strictly
agricultural towns, where the unimproved land values are
very small?
A. However poor the town or heavy the taxes, it would at
least tend the equalize their present tax burden. The
assessed value of land in the three smallest towns of
Massachusetts, Alford, Holland, and Peru, is $282,335, or
more than three times that of the buildings. Allowing one
half of the assessed valuation of land to be improvement
value, the unimproved basis for taxation would be
$141,168, or 60 percent more than the buildings. Thus an
apportionment according to unimproved land values,
increasing ever so slowly, would seem to be fairer than
one according to improvements, which require constant
renewal. ... read the whole
article
Henry George: Political
Dangers (Chapter 2 of Social Problems, 1883)
[05] There is a suggestive
fact that must impress any one who thinks over the
history of past eras and preceding civilizations.
The great, wealthy and powerful nations have
always lost their freedom; it is only in small, poor and
isolated communities that Liberty has been
maintained. So true is this that the poets have
always sung that Liberty loves the rocks and the
mountains; that she shrinks from wealth and power and
splendor, from the crowded city and the busy mart. So
true is this that philosophical historians have sought in
the richness of material resources the causes of the
corruption and enslavement of peoples.
[06] Liberty is natural.
Primitive perceptions are of the equal rights of the
citizen, and political organization always starts from
this base. It is as social development goes on that we
find power concentrating, in institutions based upon the
equality of rights passing into institutions which make
the many the slaves of the few. How this is we may see.
In all institutions which involve the lodgment of
governing power there is, with social growth, a tendency
to the exaltation of their function and the
centralization of their power, and in the stronger of
these institutions a tendency to the absorption of the
powers of the rest. Thus the tendency of social growth is
to make government the business of a special class. And
as numbers increase and the power and importance of each
become less and less as compared with that of all, so,
for this reason, does government tend to pass beyond the
scrutiny and control of the masses. The leader of
a handful of warriors, or head man of a little village,
can command or govern only by common consent, and anyone
aggrieved can readily appeal to his fellows. But
when a tribe becomes a nation and the village expands to
a populous country, the powers of the chieftain, without
formal addition, become practically much greater. For
with increase of numbers scrutiny of his acts becomes
more difficult, it is harder and harder successfully to
appeal from them, and the aggregate power which he
directs becomes irresistible as against individuals. And
gradually, as power thus concentrates, primitive ideas
are lost, and the habit of thought grows up which regards
the masses as born but for the service of their
rulers.
[07] Thus the mere growth of
society involves danger of the gradual conversion of
government into something independent of and beyond the
people, and the gradual seizure of its powers by a ruling
class — though not necessarily a class marked off
by personal titles and a hereditary status, for, as
history shows, personal titles and hereditary status do
not accompany the concentration of power, but follow it.
The same methods which, in a little town where
each knows his neighbor and matters of common interest
are under the common eye, enable the citizens freely to
govern themselves, may, in a great city, as we have in
many cases seen, enable an organized ring of plunderers
to gain and hold the government. So, too, as we
see in Congress, and even in our State legislatures, the
growth of the country and the greater number of interests
make the proportion of the votes of a representative, of
which his constituents know or care to know, less and
less. And so, too, the executive and judicial departments
tend constantly to pass beyond the scrutiny of the
people. ... read the
entire essay
Henry George:
Concentrations of Wealth Harm America (excerpt from
Social Problems)
(1883)
There is a suggestive fact that must impress any
one who thinks over the history of past eras and
preceding civilizations. The great, wealthy and powerful
nations have always lost their freedom; it is only in
small, poor and isolated communities that Liberty has
been maintained. So true is this that the poets have
always sung that Liberty loves the rocks and tile
mountains; that she shrinks from wealth and power and
splendor, from the crowded city and the busy
mart....
The mere growth of society involves
danger of the gradual conversion of government into
something independent of and beyond the people, and the
gradual seizure of its powers by a ruling class -- though
not necessarily a class marked off by personal titles and a
hereditary status, for, as history shows, personal titles
and hereditary status do not accompany the concentration of
power, but follow it. The same methods
which, in a little town where each knows his neighbor and
matters of common interest are under the common eye, enable
the citizens freely to govern themselves, may, in a great
city, as we have in many cases seen, enable an organized
ring of plunderers to gain and hold the government.
So, too, as we see in Congress, and even in our State
legislatures, the growth of the country and the greater
number of interests make the proportion of the votes of a
representative, of which his constituents know or care to
know, less and less. And so, too, the executive and
judicial departments tend constantly to pass beyond the
scrutiny of the people. ...
Read the entire
article
|
To share this page with a friend:
right click, choose "send," and add your
comments.
|
|
Red links have not been
visited; .
Green links are pages you've seen
|
Essential Documents pertinent
to this theme:
|
|