Seeing the Cat
"Seeing the cat" is Georgist shorthand for the
"aha!" moment when one starts to see how the
distortions of our current way of treating the rent on
land as mostly private property ripple throughout
society, creating a huge range of social and justice
problems. A lot of things that individually make
no sense, and which popular academic economics theories
fail to explain, fall into place and form a cohesive
whole.
I hope this website will help you have that "aha!"
moment for yourself, and then to share it with
others. When enough of us come to understand the
underpinnings of our current problems, and that there
is a simple and just alternative, we can together set
about creating the society that our founding fathers'
words spoke of.
Louis Post Seeing the
Cat
... There it was, sure enough, just as the crank had
said; and the only reason the rest of us couldn't see it
was that we hadn't got the right angle of view. but now
that I saw the cat, I could see nothing else in the
picture. The poor landscape had disappeared and a fine
looking cat had taken its place. And do you know, I was
never afterwards able, upon looking at that picture, to
see anything in it *but* the cat.
(to which Nic Tideman adds, "In my view, 'the cat' is
the possibility of a world without privilege.)
H.G. Brown: Significant
Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress & Poverty,
Chapter 5: The Basic Cause of Poverty (in the
unabridged:
Book V: The Problem Solved)
In all our long investigation we have been advancing
to this simple truth: That as land is necessary to the
exertion of labor in the production of wealth, to command
the land which is necessary to labor, is to command all
the fruits of labor save enough to enable labor to exist.
We have been advancing as through an enemy's country, in
which every step must be secured, every position
fortified, and every bypath explored; for this simple
truth, in its application to social and political
problems, is hid from the great masses of men partly by
its very simplicity, and in greater part by widespread
fallacies and erroneous habits of thought which lead them
to look in every direction but the right one for an
explanation of the evils which oppress and threaten the
civilized world. And back of these elaborate fallacies
and misleading theories is an active, energetic power, a
power that in every country, be its political forms what
they may, writes laws and molds thought — the power
of a vast and dominant pecuniary interest.
But so simple and so clear is this truth, that to see
it fully once is always to recognize it. There are
pictures which, though looked at again and again, present
only a confused labyrinth of lines or scroll work —
a landscape, trees, or something of the kind —
until once the attention is called to the fact that these
things make up a face or a figure. This relation, once
recognized, is always afterward clear.*
*Hence the expression, current among
adherents of Henry George's proposal: "Do you see the
cat?"
... For land is the habitation of man, the storehouse
upon which he must draw for all his needs, the material
to which his labor must be applied for the supply of all
his desires; for even the products of the sea cannot be
taken, the light of the sun enjoyed, or any of the forces
of nature utilized, without the use of land or its
products. On the land we are born, from it we live, to it
we return again — children of the soil as truly as
is the blade of grass or the flower of the field. Take
away from man all that belongs to land, and he is but a
disembodied spirit. Material progress cannot rid us of
our dependence upon land; it can but add to the power of
producing wealth from land; and hence, when land is
monopolized, it might go on to infinity without
increasing wages or improving the condition of those who
have but their labor. It can but add to the value of land
and the power which its possession gives. Everywhere, in
all times, among all peoples, the possession of land is
the base of aristocracy, the foundation of great
fortunes, the source of power. ... read the whole
chapter
Fred Foldvary: See
the Cat
A man was walking down a shopping street and came to a
store window where there was a big drawing full of lines
and squiggles. A sign by the drawing asked, "Can you see
the picture?"
All the man could see was a chaos of lines going every
which way. He stared at it and tried to make out some
kind of design, but it was all a jumble. Then he saw that
some of the lines formed ears, and whiskers, and a tail.
Suddenly he realized that there was a cat in the picture.
Once he saw the cat, it was unmistakable. When he looked
away and then looked back at the drawing, the cat was
quite evident now.
The man then realized that the economy is like the
cat. It seems to be a jumble of workers, consumers,
enterprises, taxes, regulations, imports and exports,
profits and losses - a chaos of all kinds of activities.
Here are fine houses and shops full of goods, but yonder
is poverty and slums. It doesn't make any sense unless we
understand the basic principles of economics. Once we
have this understanding, the economy becomes clear -- we
see the cat instead of a jumble. We then know the cause
of poverty and its remedy. But since most folks don't see
the cat, social policy just treats the symptoms without
applying the remedies that would eliminate the
problem.
What is this economics cat? It starts with the three
factors or resource inputs of production: land, labor,
and capital goods. ...
Lindy Davies: The
Cat in New York
When I taught at the Henry George School
in New York, our Director, George Collins, used to
give a stirring graduation speech to students. He told
them they would find that the gift of insight they'd been
given, in studying Georgist political economy, was also a
kind of curse: they would never look upon their city with
the same eyes. The land question and its ramifications,
the malignant absurdities of today's economic systems and
the sheer obviousness of the remedy, would shout at them
in every day's news.
I was reminded of that when I recently visited New
York. ...
Economists note in this budget
crunch, as in others the city has faced, a curious
disconnect between the fiscal crisis and the overall
economy. Tax receipts are way down and the budget outlook
is indeed scary, even while the underlying economy actually
lurches toward recovery. If it weren't for the large
declines in the (admittedly, very important) financial and
tourism sectors, the city's economy would not be performing
badly at all. How unfortunate, then, that
New York will see no other alternative than to choke off
economic recovery by raising income and sales taxes while
cutting back on public services. But what can they do? The
tax base is declining.
Or is it? It turns out that land
values in New York, while modestly down in some areas, have
not taken anywhere near the beating that the Stock Market
has, or the small business community, or public services.
No, the real estate market in New York City remains, all in
all, quite bullish. There are few bargains to be had.
Residential rents, of course, having been held artificially
low by rent stabilization, provide no relief even in a weak
market.
So, no — despite the dire
warnings, New York City need not endure a fiscal crisis.
Its tax base — properly defined — is robustly
capable of providing for public needs, while actually
bringing business into the city. They have
just been taxing the wrong things, all along. Tourists,
bulls and bears come and go, but New York City's land
values — like its citizens — are quite
resilient. ...
Read
the whole article
Bill Batt: Who Says
Cities are Poor? They Just Don't Know How to Tax Their
Wealth!
All this makes for a far simpler and more
comprehensible system of taxation. Land taxes are totally
transparent, impossible to evade, and therefore much more
administrable. This further engenders the legitimacy of
taxation and of government itself. What it also does is
assure stability to the tax system, for the reason that
land values are not subject to the variations and
vacillations that other tax bases frequently have.
Indeed, the removal of economic rent from locational
sites discourages speculative bubbles and the related
economic cycles that are associated with them. This
greater stability and reliability is to the advantage of
every sector of the economy — private, public, and
non-profit.
A tax that collects economic rent offers a win-win
proposition to every sector of the community —
except to those who speculate in land. But who wants to
favor land speculators? They are not held in high regard
anywhere; their destructive behavior is the bane of
cities, recognized everywhere for what it is: parasitic
and passive. Speculators provide no added value to a
community's well-being, and taxing rent is a foolproof
means by which to eliminate it. Land speculation is
highest where the most rent can be privately captured,
but it forces those who choose to develop to look to
sub-optimal locations when the primary locations they
hoped for are held off the market for opportunistic gain.
By collecting rent, primary choice locations become
available for use and to facilitate the development of
land use configurations ideal for the economic health and
efficient allocation. Urban ambience is improved, public
sector service costs are reduced, and sprawl development
is stemmed.
In the final analysis cities have no reason to
complain other than by being hoodwinked by an economics
profession that went off track a century ago and has seen
its own disciples unable to take off the
veil.[23]
It was then that economic theory was altered to treat
land as simply another form of capital, changed to
formulas based on two factors of production rather than
three, and disposing of the notion of economic rent
altogether. Henry George, the last passionate defender of
the classical economic tradition a century ago, lost his
fight to preserve three-factor economics. But there are
many still who appreciate the value, even the truth, of
his insight and analysis. Today we have the computer
power to test these ideas and to demonstrate their
validity. There is an oft retold story among adherents of
the Georgist school referred to as "seeing the cat." ...
read the whole
article
Louis Post: Outlines
of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and
Charts (1894)
IV.
CONCLUSION
In "Progress and Poverty," after reaching his
conclusion that command of the land which is necessary
for labor is command of all the fruits of labor save
enough to enable labor to exist, Henry George says:
So simple and so clear is this truth that to fully
see it once is always to recognize it. There are
pictures which, though looked at again and again,
present only a confused labyrinth of lines or
scroll-work — a landscape, trees, or something of
the kind — until once attention is called to the
fact that these things make up a face or a figure. This
relation once recognized is always afterward clear. 111
It is so in this case. In the light of this truth all
social facts group themselves in an orderly relation,
and the most diverse phenomena are seen to spring from
one great principle.
111. This idea of the concealed picture
was graphically illustrated with a story by Congressman
James G. Maguire, at that time a Judge of the Superior
Court of San Francisco, in a speech at the Academy of
Music, New York City, in 1887. In substance he
said:
"I was one day walking along Kearney
Street in San Francisco, when I noticed a crowd around
the show window of a store, looking at something
inside. I took a glance myself and saw only a very poor
picture of a very uninteresting landscape. But as I was
turning away my eye caught the words underneath the
picture, 'Do you see the cat?' I looked again and more
closely, but saw no cat in the picture. Then I spoke to
the crowd.
"'Gentlemen,' I said, 'I see no cat in
that picture. Is there a cat there?'
Some one in the crowd replied:
"'Naw, there ain't no cat there. Here's a
crank who says he sees the cat, but nobody else can see
it.'
Then the crank spoke up:
'I tell you there is a cat there, too.
It's all cat. What you fellows take for a landscape is
just nothing more than the outlines of a cat. And you
needn't call a man a crank either, because he can see
more with his eyes than you can.'
"Well," the judge continued, "I looked
very closely at the picture, and then I said to the man
they called a crank:
"'Really, sir, I cannot make out a cat. I
can see nothing but a poor picture of a landscape.'
"'Why, judge,' he exclaimed, 'just look
at that bird in the air. That's the cat's ear.'
I looked, but was obliged to say:
'I am sorry to be so stupid, but I can't
make a cat's ear of that bird. It is a poor bird, but
not a cat's ear.'
"'Well, then,' the crank urged, 'look at
that twig twirled around in a circle. That's the cat's
eye.'
But I couldn't make an eye of it.
'Oh, then,' said the crank a little
impatiently, 'look at those sprouts at the foot of the
tree, and the grass. They make the cat's claws.'
"After another deliberate examination, I
reported that they did look a little like a claw, but I
couldn't connect them with a cat.
"Once more the crank came back at me.
'Don't you see that limb off there? and that other limb
under it? and that white space between? Well, that
white space is the cat's tail.'
"I looked again and was just on the point
of replying that there was no cat there so far as I
could see, when suddenly the whole cat burst upon me.
There it was, sure enough, just as the crank had said;
and the only reason that the rest of us couldn't see it
was that we hadn't got the right point of view. But now
that I saw it I could see nothing else in the picture.
The landscape had disappeared and a cat had taken its
place. And, do you know, I was never afterward able,
upon looking at that picture, to see anything in it but
the cat!"
From this story as told by Judge Maguire,
has come the slang of the single tax agitation. To "see
the cat " is to understand the single tax.
Many events subsequent to his writing have gone to
prove that Henry George was right. Each new phase of the
social problem makes it still more clear that the
disorderly development of our civilization is explained,
not by pressure of population, nor by the superficial
relations of employers and employed, nor by scarcity of
money, nor by the drinking habits of the poor, nor by
individual differences in ability to produce wealth, nor
by an incompetent or malevolent Creator, but, as he has
said, by "inequality in the ownership of land." And each
new phase makes it equally clear that the remedy for
poverty is not to be found in famine and disease and war,
nor in strikes which are akin to war, nor in the
suppression of strikes by force of arms, nor in the
coinage of money, nor in prohibition or high license, nor
in technical education, nor in anything else short of
approximate equality in the ownership of land. This alone
secures equal opportunities to produce, and full
ownership by each producer of his own product. This is
justice, this is order. And unless our civilization have
it for a foundation, new forms of slavery will assuredly
lead us into new forms of barbarism.112
112. "Our primary social adjustment is a
denial of justice. In allowing one man to own the land
on which and from which other men must live, we have
made them his bondsmen in a degree which increases as
material progress goes on. This is the subtile alchemy
that in ways they do not realize is extracting from the
masses in every civilized country the fruits of their
weary toil; that is instituting a harder and more
hopeless slavery in place of that which has been
destroyed; that is bringing political despotism out of
political freedom, and must soon transmute democratic
institutions into anarchy.
"It is this that turns the blessings of
material progress into a curse. It is this that crowds
human beings into noisome cellars and squalid tenement
houses; that fills prisons and brothels; that goads men
with want and consumes them with greed; that robs women
of the grace and beauty of perfect womanhood; that
takes from little children the joy and innocence of
life's morning.
"Civilization so based cannot
continue. The eternal laws of the universe forbid it.
Ruins of dead empires testify, and the witness that is
in every soul answers, that it cannot be. It is
something grander than Benevolence, something more
august than Charity — it is justice herself that
demands of us to right this wrong. justice that will
not be denied; that cannot be put off — justice
that with the scales carries the sword." —
Progress and Poverty, book x, ch. v. ...
read the
book
|
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:
|
|