Supporting a Family
How hard should life be for the average person? How
hard should it be for the person at, say, the 25th
percentile of the income distribution? How hard for a
family at the 10th, or 5th or 1st percentile? If
something in our structure, our customs or our traditions
is making life unnecessarily difficult for what the Bible
calls "the least of these," isn't it incumbent on us
— whatever our religious beliefs — to
discover and eradicate those structures, customs or
traditions?
Henry George: The
Crime of Poverty (1885 speech)
Why, in the rudest state of
society in the most primitive state of the arts the
labour of the natural bread-winner will suffice to
provide a living for himself and for those who are
dependent upon him. Amid all our inventions there
are large bodies of men who cannot do this. What is the
most astonishing thing in our civilisation? Why, the most
astonishing thing to those Sioux chiefs who were recently
brought from the Far West and taken through our
manufacturing cities in the East, was not the marvellous
inventions that enabled machinery to act almost as if it
had intellect; it was not the growth of our cities; it
was not the speed with which the railway car whirled
along; it was not the telegraph or the
telephone that most astonished them; but the fact that
amid this marvellous development of productive power they
found little children at work. And astonishing
that ought to be to us; a most astounding
thing!
Talk about improvement in the
condition of the working classes, when the facts are that
a larger and larger proportion of women and children are
forced to toil. Why, I am told that, even here in
your own city, there are children of thirteen and
fourteen working in factories. In Detroit, according to
the report of the Michigan Bureau of Labour Statistics,
one half of the children of school age do not go to
school. In New Jersey, the report made to the legislature
discloses an amount of misery and ignorance that is
appalling. Children are growing up there, compelled to
monotonous toil when they ought to be at play, children
who do not know how to play; children who have been so
long accustomed to work that they have become used to it;
children growing up in such ignorance that they do not
know what country New Jersey is in, that they never heard
of George Washington, that some of them think Europe is
in New York. Such facts are appalling; they mean that the
very foundations of the Republic are being sapped.
The dangerous man is not the man who
tries to excite discontent; the dangerous man is the man
who says that all is as it ought to be. Such a
state of things cannot continue; such tendencies as we
see at work here cannot go on without bringing at last an
overwhelming crash. ... read the
whole speech
Alanna Hartzok:
Who Would Jesus Tax? The Saga of Susan Pace Hamill's
Alabama Tax Crusade
A University of Alabama School of Law Professor has
asked God's forgiveness for the years she lived in the
sin of ignorance about tax injustice. Susan Pace Hamill,
a tax expert, business consultant, and dedicated United
Methodist church goer, thought there was a misprint when
she first read that personal incomes as low as $4,600 for
a family of four were being taxed by the state, while
timber owners holding 71% of the land of Alabama were
paying less than $1 per acre in property taxes. Two hours
later she found out there had been no mistake and that
Alabama has the most regressive tax code in the country.
Her righteous rage spawned a tax crusade that has
reverberated onto the national scene.
"As somebody who knows a lot about taxes, I could not
have imagined a design of a tax structure this bad," she
said in a Tuscaloosa Newsstory last February.
"The state's tax code is really horribly unjust and has
no moral, ethical leg to stand on. Period."
Alabamians with incomes under $13,000 pay 10.9 percent of
their incomes in state and local taxes while those who
make over $229,000 pay just 4.1 percent. Commercial
property owners pay more than 50 percent of property
taxes, with homes approaching one-third. Alabama's sales
taxes are among the highest in the nation, up to 10
percent in some areas, and do not exempt even the most
basic necessities such as food. The state's 1901
constitution was written primarily by large landholders
to secure their economic interests, consequently property
taxes are extremely light on their holdings. ...
While resoundingly condemning the current system (she
uses words like "horrific" and "monstrous injustice")
Hamill clearly articulates a tax reform approach which
shifts taxes off of low wage earners and onto large land
owners. Through a combination of her own reasoning,
caring heart, and inherent sense of justice and a
thorough investigation of Judeo-Christian ethics, Hamill
arrived at a tax policy approach which bears remarkable
similarities to the economic justice crusades of 19th
century reformer, Henry George. ...
read the whole article
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