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Wealth and Want | |||||||
... because democracy alone is not enough to produce widely shared prosperity. | |||||||
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U'Ren
Mason Gaffney: Introduction: The Power
of Neo-classical Economics (Introduction to
The Corruption of Economics,
London: Shepheard-Walwyn, 1994) Consider, for example, that in 1913
Wm. S. U'Ren, "Father of the Initiative
and Referendum," created this system of direct democracy
for the express purpose of pushing single-tax initiatives
in Oregon. According to U'Ren, another by-product of the
single-tax campaigns in Oregon was the 1910 "adoption of
the first Presidential Primary Law, which was quickly
imitated by so many other States that (Woodrow) Wilson's
nomination and election over Taft was made possible"
(U'Ren, p.43). To that we may add that another "Father of
the Direct Primary," George L. Record of New Jersey, was
a mentor of Woodrow Wilson and an earnest Georgist who
had gotten railroad lands uptaxed to the great benefit of
public schools in New Jersey, and to the impoverishment
of special interest election funds. "... it was the
passage of these great election reforms in the Wilson
Administration (in New Jersey) that led ... (to) winning
the Bryan support and the Democratic nomination for
President" (Blauvelt, p.28). That helps explain the
gratitude of President Wilson, who included single-taxers
in his Cabinet (Newton D. Baker, Louis F. Post, Franklin
K. Lane, and William B. Wilson), and worked with
single-tax Congressmen like Henry George, Jr., and Warren
Worth Bailey (Geiger, 1933, p.464; Brownlee).
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... because democracy alone hasn't yet led to a society
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