For whom was the earth created? Are some of us more
entitled than others to its riches? Is it those who
work who are entitled, or those who claim ownership of
land and other natural resources? Should some of us be
able to charge others rent for the use of land and
other natural resources, and keep that rent as if it
was something we had created, or should the annual
value of the land itself be passed along to the
commons, as the foundation for our common spending?
Should ownership of land and other resources be a
source of wealth for a lucky few, or should land and
natural resources be fundamentally the common property
of all the world's people, or of the residents of each
country?
Henry George: Ode to
Liberty (1877 speech)
In the very centers of our civilization today are
want and suffering enough to make sick at heart whoever
does not close his eyes and steel his nerves. Dare we
turn to the Creator and ask Him to relieve it? Supposing
the prayer were heard, and at the behest with which the
universe sprang into being there should glow in the sun a
greater power; new virtue fill the air; fresh vigor the
soil; that for every blade of grass that now grows two
should spring up, and the seed that now increases
fifty-fold should increase a hundredfold! Would poverty
be abated or want relieved? Manifestly no! Whatever
benefit would accrue would be but temporary. The new
powers streaming through the material universe could be
utilized only through land. And land, being private
property, the classes that now monopolize the bounty of
the Creator would monopolize all the new bounty. Land
owners would alone be benefited. Rents would increase,
but wages would still tend to the starvation point!
... read the whole speech
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
Your use, in so many passages of your Encyclical, of
the inclusive term “property” or
“private” property, of which in morals
nothing can be either affirmed or denied, makes your
meaning, if we take isolated sentences, in many places
ambiguous. But reading it as a whole, there can be no
doubt of your intention that private property in land
shall be understood when you speak merely of private
property. With this interpretation, I find that the
reasons you urge for private property in land are eight.
Let us consider them in order of presentation. You
urge:
1. That what is bought with rightful property is
rightful property. (RN, paragraph 5) ...
2. That private property in land proceeds from
man’s gift of reason. (RN, paragraphs 6-7.)
...
3. That private property in land deprives no one of the
use of land. (RN, paragraph 8.) ...
4. That Industry expended on land gives ownership in the
land itself. (RN, paragraphs 9-10.) ...
5. That private property in land has the support of the
common opinion of mankind, and has conduced to peace and
tranquillity, and that it is sanctioned by Divine Law.
(RN, paragraph 11.) ...
6. That fathers should provide for their children and
that private property in land is necessary to enable them
to do so. (RN, paragraphs 14-17.) ...
7. That the private ownership of land stimulates
industry, increases wealth, and attaches men to the soil
and to their country. (RN, paragraph 51.) ...
8. That the right to possess private property in land is
from nature, not from man; that the state has no right to
abolish it, and that to take the value of landownership
in taxation would be unjust and cruel to the private
owner. (RN, paragraph 51.) ...
2. That private property in land proceeds from
man’s gift of reason. (6-7.)
In the second place your Holiness argues that man
possessing reason and forethought may not only acquire
ownership of the fruits of the earth, but also of the
earth itself, so that out of its products he may make
provision for the future.
Reason, with its attendant forethought, is indeed the
distinguishing attribute of man; that which raises him
above the brute, and shows, as the Scriptures declare,
that he is created in the likeness of God. And this gift
of reason does, as your Holiness points out, involve the
need and right of private property in whatever is
produced by the exertion of reason and its attendant
forethought, as well as in what is produced by physical
labor. In truth, these elements of man’s production
are inseparable, and labor involves the use of reason. It
is by his reason that man differs from the animals in
being a producer, and in this sense a maker. Of
themselves his physical powers are slight, forming as it
were but the connection by which the mind takes hold of
material things, so as to utilize to its will the matter
and forces of nature. It is mind, the intelligent reason,
that is the prime mover in labor, the essential agent in
production.
The right of private ownership does therefore
indisputably attach to things provided by man’s
reason and forethought. But it cannot attach to things
provided by the reason and forethought of God!
To illustrate: Let us suppose a company traveling
through the desert as the Israelites traveled from Egypt.
Such of them as had the forethought to provide themselves
with vessels of water would acquire a just right of
property in the water so carried, and in the thirst of
the waterless desert those who had neglected to provide
themselves, though they might ask water from the
provident in charity, could not demand it in right. For
while water itself is of the providence of God, the
presence of this water in such vessels, at such place,
results from the providence of the men who carried it.
Thus they have to it an exclusive right.
But suppose others use their forethought in pushing
ahead and appropriating the springs, refusing when their
fellows come up to let them drink of the water save as
they buy it of them. Would such forethought give any
right?
Your Holiness, it is not the forethought of carrying
water where it is needed, but the forethought of seizing
springs, that you seek to defend in defending the private
ownership of land!
Let me show this more fully, since it may be worth
while to meet those who say that if private property in
land be not just, then private property in the products
of labor is not just, as the material of these products
is taken from land. It will be seen on consideration that
all of man’s production is analogous to such
transportation of water as we have supposed. In growing
grain, or smelting metals, or building houses, or weaving
cloth, or doing any of the things that constitute
producing, all that man does is to change in place or
form preexisting matter. As a producer man is merely a
changer, not a creator; God alone creates. And since the
changes in which man’s production consists inhere
in matter so long as they persist, the right of private
ownership attaches the accident to the essence, and gives
the right of ownership in that natural material in which
the labor of production is embodied. Thus water, which in
its original form and place is the common gift of God to
all men, when drawn from its natural reservoir and
brought into the desert, passes rightfully into the
ownership of the individual who by changing its place has
produced it there.
But such right of ownership is in reality a
mere right of temporary possession. For though man may
take material from the storehouse of nature and change it
in place or form to suit his desires, yet from the moment
he takes it, it tends back to that storehouse again. Wood
decays, iron rusts, stone disintegrates and is displaced,
while of more perishable products, some will last for
only a few months, others for only a few days, and some
disappear immediately on use. Though, so far as
we can see, matter is eternal and force forever persists;
though we can neither annihilate nor create the tiniest
mote that floats in a sunbeam or the faintest impulse
that stirs a leaf, yet in the ceaseless flux of nature,
man’s work of moving and combining constantly
passes away. Thus the recognition of the ownership of
what natural material is embodied in the products of man
never constitutes more than temporary possession —
never interferes with the reservoir provided for all. As
taking water from one place and carrying it to another
place by no means lessens the store of water, since
whether it is drunk or spilled or left to evaporate, it
must return again to the natural reservoirs — so is
it with all things on which man in production can lay the
impress of his labor.
Hence, when you say that man’s reason puts it
within his right to have in stable and permanent
possession not only things that perish in the using, but
also those that remain for use in the future, you are
right in so far as you may include such things as
buildings, which with repair will last for generations,
with such things as food or fire-wood, which are
destroyed in the use. But when you infer that man can
have private ownership in those permanent things of
nature that are the reservoirs from which all must draw,
you are clearly wrong. Man may indeed hold in private
ownership the fruits of the earth produced by his labor,
since they lose in time the impress of that labor, and
pass again into the natural reservoirs from which they
were taken, and thus the ownership of them by one works
no injury to others. But he cannot so own the earth
itself, for that is the reservoir from which must
constantly be drawn not only the material with which
alone men can produce, but even their very bodies.
The conclusive reason why man cannot claim ownership
in the earth itself as he can in the fruits that he by
labor brings forth from it, is in the facts stated by you
in the very next paragraph (7), when you truly say:
Man’s needs do not die out, but recur;
satisfied today, they demand new supplies tomorrow.
Nature, therefore, owes to man a storehouse that shall
never fail, the daily supply of his daily wants. And
this he finds only in the inexhaustible fertility of
the earth.
By man you mean all men. Can what nature owes to all
men be made the private property of some men, from which
they may debar all other men?
Let me dwell on the words of your Holiness,
“Nature, therefore, owes to man a storehouse that
shall never fail.” By Nature you mean God. Thus
your thought, that in creating us, God himself has
incurred an obligation to provide us with a storehouse
that shall never fail, is the same as is thus expressed
and carried to its irresistible conclusion by
the Bishop of Meath:
God was perfectly free in the act by which He
created us; but having created us he bound himself by
that act to provide us with the means necessary for our
subsistence. The land is the only source of this kind
now known to us. The land, therefore, of every country
is the common property of the people of that country,
because its real owner, the Creator who made it, has
transferred it as a voluntary gift to them.
“Terram autem dedit filiis
hominum.” Now, as every individual in that
country is a creature and child of God, and as all his
creatures are equal in his sight, any settlement of the
land of a country that would exclude the humblest man
in that country from his share of the common
inheritance would be not only an injustice and a wrong
to that man, but, moreover, be AN IMPIOUS RESISTANCE TO
THE BENEVOLENT INTENTIONS OF HIS CREATOR. ...
6. That fathers should provide for their
children and that private property in land is necessary
to enable them to do so. (14-17.)
With all that your Holiness has to say of the
sacredness of the family relation we are in full accord.
But how the obligation of the father to the child can
justify private property in land we cannot see. You
reason that private property in land is necessary to the
discharge of the duty of the father, and is therefore
requisite and just, because —
It is a most sacred law of nature that a father must
provide food and all necessaries for those whom he has
begotten; and, similarly, nature dictates that a
man’s children, who carry on, as it were, and
continue his own personality, should be provided by him
with all that is needful to enable them honorably to keep
themselves from want and misery in the uncertainties of
this mortal life. Now, in no other way can a father
effect this except by the ownership of profitable
property, which he can transmit to his children by
inheritance. (14.)
Thanks to Him who has bound the generations of men
together by a provision that brings the tenderest love to
greet our entrance into the world and soothes our exit
with filial piety, it is both the duty and the joy of the
father to care for the child till its powers mature, and
afterwards in the natural order it becomes the duty and
privilege of the child to be the stay of the parent. This
is the natural reason for that relation of marriage, the
groundwork of the sweetest, tenderest and purest of human
joys, which the Catholic Church has guarded with such
unremitting vigilance.
We do, for a few years, need the providence of our
fathers after the flesh. But how small, how transient,
how narrow is this need, as compared with our constant
need for the providence of Him in whom we live, move and
have our being — Our Father who art in Heaven! It
is to him, “the giver of every good and perfect
gift,” and not to our fathers after the flesh, that
Christ taught us to pray, “Give us this day our
daily bread.” And how true it is that it is
through him that the generations of men exist! Let the
mean temperature of the earth rise or fall a few degrees,
an amount as nothing compared with differences produced
in our laboratories, and mankind would disappear as ice
disappears under a tropical sun, would fall as the leaves
fall at the touch of frost. Or, let for two or three
seasons the earth refuse her increase, and how many of
our millions would remain alive?
The duty of fathers to transmit to their children
profitable property that will enable them to keep
themselves from want and misery in the uncertainties of
this mortal life! What is not possible cannot be a duty.
And how is it possible for fathers to do that? Your
Holiness has not considered how mankind really lives from
hand to mouth, getting each day its daily bread; how
little one generation does or can leave another. It is
doubtful if the wealth of the civilized world all told
amounts to anything like as much as one year’s
labor, while it is certain that if labor were to stop and
men had to rely on existing accumulation, it would be
only a few days ere in the richest countries pestilence
and famine would stalk.
The profitable property your Holiness refers to, is
private property in land. Now profitable land, as all
economists will agree, is land superior to the land that
the ordinary man can get. It is land that will yield an
income to the owner as owner, and therefore that will
permit the owner to appropriate the products of labor
without doing labor, its profitableness to the individual
involving the robbery of other individuals. It is
therefore possible only for some fathers to leave their
children profitable land. What therefore your Holiness
practically declares is, that it is the duty of all
fathers to struggle to leave their children what only the
few peculiarly strong, lucky or unscrupulous can leave;
and that, a something that involves the robbery of others
— their deprivation of the material gifts of
God.
This anti-Christian doctrine has been long in practice
throughout the Christian world. What are its results?
Are they not the very evils set forth in your
Encyclical? Are they not, so far from enabling men to
keep themselves from want and misery in the uncertainties
of this mortal life, to condemn the great masses of men
to want and misery that the natural conditions of our
mortal life do not entail; to want and misery deeper and
more wide-spread than exist among heathen savages? Under
the régime of private property in land and in the
richest countries not five per cent of fathers are able
at their death to leave anything substantial to their
children, and probably a large majority do not leave
enough to bury them! Some few children are left by their
fathers richer than it is good for them to be, but the
vast majority not only are left nothing by their fathers,
but by the system that makes land private property are
deprived of the bounty of their Heavenly Father; are
compelled to sue others for permission to live and to
work, and to toil all their lives for a pittance that
often does not enable them to escape starvation and
pauperism.
What your Holiness is actually, though of course
inadvertently, urging, is that earthly fathers should
assume the functions of the Heavenly Father. It is not
the business of one generation to provide the succeeding
generation “with all that is needful to enable them
honorably to keep themselves from want and misery.”
That is God’s business. We no more create our
children than we create our fathers. It is God who is the
Creator of each succeeding generation as fully as of the
one that preceded it. And, to recall your own
words (7), “Nature [God], therefore, owes to man a
storehouse that shall never fail, the daily supply of his
daily wants. And this he finds only in the inexhaustible
fertility of the earth.” What you are now assuming
is, that it is the duty of men to provide for the wants
of their children by appropriating this storehouse and
depriving other men’s children of the unfailing
supply that God has provided for all.
The duty of the father to the child — the duty
possible to all fathers! Is it not so to conduct himself,
so to nurture and teach it, that it shall come to manhood
with a sound body, well-developed mind, habits of virtue,
piety and industry, and in a state of society that shall
give it and all others free access to the bounty of God,
the providence of the All-Father?
In doing this the father would be doing more to secure
his children from want and misery than is possible now to
the richest of fathers — as much more as the
providence of God surpasses that of man. For the justice
of God laughs at the efforts of men to circumvent it, and
the subtle law that binds humanity together poisons the
rich in the sufferings of the poor. Even the few who are
able in the general struggle to leave their children
wealth that they fondly think will keep them from want
and misery in the uncertainties of this mortal life
— do they succeed? Does experience show that it is
a benefit to a child to place him above his fellows and
enable him to think God’s law of labor is not for
him? Is not such wealth oftener a curse than a blessing,
and does not its expectation often destroy filial love
and bring dissensions and heartburnings into families?
And how far and how long are even the richest and
strongest able to exempt their children from the common
lot? Nothing is more certain than that the blood of the
masters of the world flows today in lazzaroni and that
the descendants of kings and princes tenant slums and
workhouses.
But in the state of society we strive for, where the
monopoly and waste of God’s bounty would be done
away with and the fruits of labor would go to the
laborer, it would be within the ability of all to make
more than a comfortable living with reasonable labor. And
for those who might be crippled or incapacitated, or
deprived of their natural protectors and breadwinners,
the most ample provision could be made out of that great
and increasing fund with which God in his law of rent has
provided society — not as a matter of niggardly and
degrading alms, but as a matter of right, as the
assurance which in a Christian state society owes to all
its members.
Thus it is that the duty of the father, the obligation
to the child, instead of giving any support to private
property in land, utterly condemns it, urging us by the
most powerful considerations to abolish it in the simple
and efficacious way of the single tax.
This duty of the father, this obligation to children,
is not confined to those who have actually children of
their own, but rests on all of us who have come to the
powers and responsibilities of manhood.
For did not Christ set a little child in the midst of
the disciples, saying to them that the angels of such
little ones always behold the face of his Father; saying
to them that it were better for a man to hang a millstone
about his neck and plunge into the uttermost depths of
the sea than to injure such a little one?
And what today is the result of private property in
land in the richest of so-called Christian countries? Is
it not that young people fear to marry; that married
people fear to have children; that children are driven
out of life from sheer want of proper nourishment and
care, or compelled to toil when they ought to be at
school or at play; that great numbers of those who attain
maturity enter it with under-nourished bodies,
overstrained nerves, undeveloped minds — under
conditions that foredoom them, not merely to suffering,
but to crime; that fit them in advance for the prison and
the brothel?
If your Holiness will consider these things we are
confident that instead of defending private property in
land you will condemn it with anathema! ...
And it is because that in what we propose — the
securing to all men of equal natural opportunities for
the exercise of their powers and the removal of all legal
restriction on the legitimate exercise of those powers
— we see the conformation of human law to the moral
law, that we hold with confidence that this is not merely
the sufficient remedy for all the evils you so strikingly
portray, but that it is the only possible remedy.
Nor is there any other. The organization of man is
such, his relations to the world in which he is placed
are such — that is to say, the immutable laws of
God are such, that it is beyond the power of human
ingenuity to devise any way by which the evils born of
the injustice that robs men of their birthright can be
removed otherwise than by doing justice, by opening to
all the bounty that God has provided for all.
Since man can live only on land and from land, since
land is the reservoir of matter and force from which
man’s body itself is taken, and on which he must
draw for all that he can produce, does it not
irresistibly follow that to give the land in ownership to
some men and to deny to others all right to it is to
divide mankind into the rich and the poor, the privileged
and the helpless? Does it not follow that those who have
no rights to the use of land can live only by selling
their power to labor to those who own the land? Does it
not follow that what the socialists call “the iron
law of wages,” what the political economists term
“the tendency of wages to a minimum,” must
take from the landless masses — the mere laborers,
who of themselves have no power to use their labor
— all the benefits of any possible advance or
improvement that does not alter this unjust division of
land? For having no power to employ themselves, they
must, either as labor-sellers or as land-renters, compete
with one another for permission to labor. This
competition with one another of men shut out from
God’s inexhaustible storehouse has no limit but
starvation, and must ultimately force wages to their
lowest point, the point at which life can just be
maintained and reproduction carried on. ...
The explanation of this and of similar paradoxes that
in our time perplex on every side may be easily seen. The
effect of all inventions and improvements that increase
productive power, that save waste and economize effort,
is to lessen the labor required for a given result, and
thus to save labor, so that we speak of them as
labor-saving inventions or improvements. Now, in a
natural state of society where the rights of all to the
use of the earth are acknowledged, labor-saving
improvements might go to the very utmost that can be
imagined without lessening the demand for men, since in
such natural conditions the demand for men lies in their
own enjoyment of life and the strong instincts that the
Creator has implanted in the human breast. But in that
unnatural state of society where the masses of men are
disinherited of all but the power to labor when
opportunity to labor is given them by others, there the
demand for them becomes simply the demand for their
services by those who hold this opportunity, and man
himself becomes a commodity. Hence, although the natural
effect of labor-saving improvement is to increase wages,
yet in the unnatural condition which private ownership of
the land begets, the effect, even of such moral
improvements as the disbandment of armies and the saving
of the labor that vice entails, is, by lessening the
commercial demand, to lower wages and reduce mere
laborers to starvation or pauperism. If labor-saving
inventions and improvements could be carried to the very
abolition of the necessity for labor, what would be the
result? Would it not be that landowners could then get
all the wealth that the land was capable of producing,
and would have no need at all for laborers, who must then
either starve or live as pensioners on the bounty of the
landowners?
Thus, so long as private property in land continues
— so long as some men are treated as owners of the
earth and other men can live on it only by their
sufferance — human wisdom can devise no means by
which the evils of our present condition may be
avoided.
Nor yet could the wisdom of God.
By the light of that right reason of which St. Thomas
speaks we may see that even he, the Almighty, so long as
his laws remain what they are, could do nothing to
prevent poverty and starvation while property in land
continues.
How could he? Should he infuse new vigor into the
sunlight, new virtue into the air, new fertility into the
soil, would not all this new bounty go to the owners of
the land, and work not benefit, but rather injury, to
mere laborers? Should he open the minds of men to the
possibilities of new substances, new adjustments, new
powers, could this do any more to relieve poverty than
steam, electricity and all the numberless discoveries and
inventions of our time have done? Or, if he were
to send down from the heavens above or cause to gush up
from the subterranean depths, food, clothing, all the
things that satisfy man’s material desires, to whom
under our laws would all these belong? So far
from benefiting man, would not this increase and
extension of his bounty prove but a curse, enabling the
privileged class more riotously to roll in wealth, and
bringing the disinherited class to more wide-spread
starvation or pauperism. ...
In the Encyclical however you commend the application
to the ordinary relations of life, under normal
conditions, of principles that in ethics are only to be
tolerated under extraordinary conditions. You are driven
to this assertion of false rights by your denial of true
rights. The natural right which each man has is
not that of demanding employment or wages from another
man; but that of employing himself — that of
applying by his own labor to the inexhaustible storehouse
which the Creator has in the land provided for all men.
Were that storehouse open, as by the single tax we would
open it, the natural demand for labor would keep pace
with the supply, the man who sold labor and the man who
bought it would become free exchangers for mutual
advantage, and all cause for dispute between workman and
employer would be gone. For then, all being free
to employ themselves, the mere opportunity to labor would
cease to seem a boon; and since no one would work for
another for less, all things considered, than he could
earn by working for himself, wages would necessarily rise
to their full value, and the relations of workman and
employer be regulated by mutual interest and
convenience.
This is the only way in which they can be
satisfactorily regulated.
Your Holiness seems to assume that there is some just
rate of wages that employers ought to be willing to pay
and that laborers should be content to receive, and to
imagine that if this were secured there would be an end
of strife. This rate you evidently think of as that which
will give working-men a frugal living, and perhaps enable
them by hard work and strict economy to lay by a little
something.
But how can a just rate of wages be fixed without the
“higgling of the market” any more than the
just price of corn or pigs or ships or paintings can be
so fixed? And would not arbitrary regulation in the one
case as in the other check that interplay that most
effectively promotes the economical adjustment of
productive forces? Why should buyers of labor, any more
than buyers of commodities, be called on to pay higher
prices than in a free market they are compelled to pay?
Why should the sellers of labor be content with anything
less than in a free market they can obtain? Why should
working-men be content with frugal fare when the world is
so rich? Why should they be satisfied with a lifetime of
toil and stinting, when the world is so beautiful? Why
should not they also desire to gratify the higher
instincts, the finer tastes? Why should they be forever
content to travel in the steerage when others find the
cabin more enjoyable? ...
And thus that pseudo-charity that discards and
denies justice works evil. On the one side, it
demoralizes its recipients, outraging that human dignity
which as you say “God himself treats with
reverence,” and turning into beggars and paupers
men who to become self-supporting, self-respecting
citizens need only the restitution of what God has given
them. On the other side, it acts as an anodyne
to the consciences of those who are living on the robbery
of their fellows, and fosters that moral delusion and
spiritual pride that Christ doubtless had in mind when he
said it was easier for a camel to pass through the eye of
a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of
Heaven. For it leads men steeped in injustice, and using
their money and their influence to bolster up injustice,
to think that in giving alms they are doing something
more than their duty toward man and deserve to be very
well thought of by God, and in a vague way to attribute
to their own goodness what really belongs to God’s
goodness. For consider: Who is the All-Provider? Who is
it that as you say, “owes to man a storehouse that
shall never fail,” and which “he finds only
in the inexhaustible fertility of the earth.” Is it
not God? And when, therefore, men, deprived of the bounty
of their God, are made dependent on the bounty of their
fellow-creatures, are not these creatures, as it were,
put in the place of God, to take credit to themselves for
paying obligations that you yourself say God owes?...
read the whole
letter
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
IF we are all here by
the equal permission of the Creator, we are all here with
an equal title to the enjoyment of His bounty —
with an equal right to the use of all that nature so
impartially offers. This is a right which is natural and
inalienable; it is a right which vests in every human
being as he enters the world, and which, during his
continuance in the world, can be limited only by the
equal rights of others. There is in nature no such thing
as a fee simple in land. There is on earth no power which
can rightfully make a grant of exclusive ownership in
land. If all existing men were to unite to grant away
their equal rights, they could not grant away the right
of those who follow them. For what are we but tenants for
a day? Have we made the earth that we should determine
the rights of those who after us shall tenant it in their
turn? The Almighty, who created the earth for man and man
for the earth, has entailed it upon all the generations
of the children of men by a decree written upon the
constitution of all things — a decree which no
human action can bar and no prescription determine, Let
the parchments be ever so many, or possession ever so
long, natural justice can recognize no right in one man
to the possession and enjoyment of land that is not
equally the right of all his fellows. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy:
Injustice of private property in land
HAS the first comer at a banquet the right to turn
back all the chairs and claim that none of the other
guests shall partake of the food provided, except as they
make terms with him? Does the first man who presents a
ticket at the door of a theater and passes in, acquire by
his priority the right to shut the doors and have the
performance go on for him alone? Does the first passenger
who enters a railroad car obtain the right to scatter his
baggage over all the seats and compel the passengers who
come in after him to stand up?
The cases are perfectly analogous. We arrive and we
depart, guests at a banquet continually spread,
spectators and participants in an entertainment where
there is room for all who come; passengers from station
to station, on an orb that whirls through space —
our rights to take and possess cannot be exclusive; they
must be bounded everywhere by the equal rights of others.
Just as the passenger in a railroad car may spread
himself and his baggage over as many seats as he pleases,
until other passengers come in, so may a settler take and
use as much land as he chooses, until it is needed by
others — a fact which is shown by the land
acquiring a value — when his right must be
curtailed by the equal rights of the others, and no
priority of appropriation can give a right which will bar
these equal rights of others. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy:
Injustice of private property in land
... go to "Gems from
George"
Weld Carter: A Clarion Call
to Sanity, to Honesty, to Justice
(1982)
Our problem today, as yesterday, and
the days before, back to the earliest recorded times, is
POVERTY. ...
... Let us begin this study of the likely causes of our
troubles by asking two questions:
- Are we over-populated?
- Are the earth's resources inadequate for this
population?
Our stage, of course, for making this study will
be this world of ours, for it is upon this world that the
drama of human living is played out, with all its joys
and all its sorrows, with all its great achievements and
all its failures, with all its nobilities and all its
wickedness.
Regardless of its size relative to
other planets, with its circumference of about twenty-five
thousand miles, to any mere mortal who must walk to the
station and back each day, it is huge. Roughly ninety-six
million miles separate the sun from the earth on the
latter's eliptical journey around the sun. At this
distance, the earth makes its annual journey in its
elliptical curve and it spins on its own canted axis.
Because of this cant, the sun's rays are distributed far
more evenly, thus minimizing their damage and maximizing
their benefits.
Consider the complementarity of
nature in the case of the two forms of life we call
vegetable and animal, in their respective uses of the two
gases, oxygen and carbon dioxide, the waste product of each
serving as the life-giving force of the other. Any increase
in the one will encourage a like response in the
other.
Marvel at the manner in which nature,
with no help from man or beast, delivers pure water to the
highest lands, increasing it as to their elevation, thus
affording us a free ride downstream and free power as we
desire it. Look with awe at the variety and quantity of
minerals with which this world is blessed, and finally at
the fecundity nature has bestowed so lavishly throughout
both animal and vegetable life: Take note of the number of
corn kernels from a single stalk that can be grown next
year from a single kernel of this year's crop; then think
of the vastly greater yields from a single cherry pit or
the seeds of a single apple, or grape or watermelon; or,
turning to the animal world, consider the hen who averages
almost an egg a day and the spawning fish as examples of
the prolificacy that is evident throughout the whole of the
animal world, including mankind.
If this marvelous earth is as rich in
resources as portrayed in the foregoing paragraph, then the
problem must be one of distribution:
- how is the land distributed among the earth's
inhabitants, and
- how are its products in turn
distributed?
Land is universally treated as either public
property or private property. Wars are fought over land.
Nowhere is it treated as common property.
George has described this world as a
"well-provisioned ship" and when one considers the
increasingly huge daily withdrawals of such provisions as
coal and petroleum as have occurred say over the past one
hundred years, one must but agree with this writer. But
this is only a static view. Consider the suggestion of some
ten years ago that it would require the conversion of less
than 20% the of the current annual growth of wood into
alcohol to fuel all the motors then being fueled by the
then-conventional means. The dynamic picture of the future
is indeed awesome, and there is every indication that that
characteristic has the potential of endless expansion.
So how is it that on so richly endowed a Garden of Eden
as this world of ours we have only been able to make of it
a hell on earth for vast numbers of people?
The answers are simple: we have permitted, nay we
have even more than that, encouraged, the gross
misallocation of resources and a viciously wicked
distribution of wealth, and we choose to be governed by
those whom we, in our ignorance, have elected. ...
read the whole essay
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
THAT man cannot exhaust or lessen the powers of nature
follows from the indestructibility of matter and the
persistence of force. Production and consumption are only
relative terms. Speaking absolutely, man neither produces
nor consumes. The whole human race, were they to labor to
infinity, could not make this rolling sphere one atom
heavier or one atom lighter, could not add to or diminish
by one iota the sum of the forces whose everlasting
circling produces all motion and sustains all life. As
the water that we take from the ocean must again return
to the ocean, so the food we take from the reservoirs of
nature is, from the moment we take it, on its way back to
those reservoirs. What we draw from a limited extent of
land may temporarily reduce the productiveness of that
land, because the return may be to other land, or may be
divided between that land and other land, or perhaps, all
land ; but this possibility lessens with increasing area,
and ceases when the whole globe is considered. —
Progress & Poverty — Book II, Chapter 3:
Population and Subsistence: Inferences from Analogy
LIFE does not use up the forces that maintain life. We
come into the material universe bringing nothing; we take
nothing away when we depart. The human being, physically
considered, is but a transient form of matter, a changing
mode of motion. The matter remains and the force
persists. Nothing is lessened, nothing is weakened. And
from this it follows that the limit to the population of
the globe can only be the limit of space. —
Progress & Poverty — Book II, Chapter 3:
Population and Subsistence: Inferences from Analogy
I BELIEVE that in a really Christian community, in a
society that honored, not with the lips but with the act,
the doctrines of Jesus, no one would have occasion to
worry about physical needs any more than do the lilies of
the field. There is enough and to spare. The trouble is
that, in this mad struggle, we trample in the mire what
has been provided in sufficiency for us all; trample it
in the mire while we tear and rend each other. —
The Crime of Poverty
WHOSE fault is it that social conditions are such that
men have to make that terrible choice between what
conscience tells them is right, and the necessity of
earning a living? I hold that it is the fault of society;
that it is the fault of us all. Pestilence is a curse.
The man who would bring cholera to this country, or the
man who, having the power to prevent its coming here,
would make no effort to do so, would be guilty of a
crime. Poverty is worse than cholera; poverty kills more
people than pestilence, even in the best of times. Look
at the death statistics of our cities; see where the
deaths come quickest; see where it is that the little
children die like flies — it is in the poorer
quarters. And the man who looks with careless eyes upon
the ravages of this pestilence; the man who does not set
himself to stay and eradicate it, he, I say, is guilty of
a crime. — The Crime of Poverty
SOCIAL progress makes the well-being of all more and
more the business of each; it binds all closer and closer
together in bonds from which none can escape. He who
observes the law and the proprieties, and cares for his
family, yet takes no interest in the general weal, and
gives no thought to those who are trodden underfoot, save
now and then to bestow alms, is not a true Christian. Nor
is he a good citizen. — Social Problems —
Chapter 1, the Increasing Importance of Social
Questions
WE cannot safely leave politics to politicians, or
political economy to college professors. The people
themselves must think, because the people alone can act.
— Social Problems — Chapter 1, the Increasing
Importance of Social Questions
NOW, why is it that men, have to work for such low
wages? Because, if they were to demand higher wages,
there are plenty of unemployed men ready to step into
their places. It is this mass of unemployed men who
compel that fierce competition that drives wages down to
the point of bare subsistence. Why is it that there are
men who cannot get employment? Did you ever think what a
strange thing it is that men cannot find employment? If
men cannot find an employer, why can they not employ
themselves? Simply because they are shut out from the
element on which human labor can alone be exerted; men
are compelled to compete with each other for the wages of
an employer, because they have been robbed of the natural
opportunities of employing themselves; because they
cannot find a piece of God's world on which to work
without paying some other human creature for the
privilege. — The Crime of Poverty
WE laud as public benefactors those who, as we say,
"furnish employment." We are constantly talking as though
this "furnishing of employment," this "giving of work"
were the greatest boon that could be conferred upon
society. To listen to much that is talked and much that
is written, one would think that the cause of poverty is
that there is not work enough for so many people, and
that if the Creator had made the rock harder, the soil
less fertile, iron as scarce as gold, and gold as
diamonds; or if ships would sink and cities burn down
oftener, there would be less poverty, because there would
be more work to do. — Social Problems, Chapter 8
— That We All Might Be Rich
YOU assert the right of laborers to employment and
their right to receive from their employers a certain
indefinite wage. No such rights exist. No one has a right
to demand employment of another, or to demand higher
wages than the other is willing to give, or in any way to
put pressure on another to make him raise such wages
against his will. There can be no better moral
justification for such demands on employers by
working-men than there would be for employers demanding
that working-men shall be compelled to work for them when
they do not want to, and to accept wages lower than they
are willing to take. — The Condition of Labor, an
Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII
THE natural right which each man has, is not that of
demanding employment or wages from another man, but that
of employing himself — that of applying by his own
labor to the inexhaustible storehouse which the Creator
has in the land provided for all men. Were that
storehouse open, as by the single tax we would open it,
the natural demand for labor would keep pace with the
supply, the man who sold labor and the man who bought it
would become free exchangers for mutual advantage, and
all cause for dispute between workman and employer would
be gone. For then, all being free to employ themselves,
the mere opportunity to labor would cease to seem a boon;
and since no one would work for another for less, all
things considered, than he could earn by working for
himself, wages would necessarily rise to their full
value, and the relations of workman and employer be
regulated by mutual interest and convenience. — The
Condition of Labor, an Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII
IF we are all here by the equal permission of the
Creator, we are all here with an equal title to the
enjoyment of His bounty — with an equal right to
the use of all that nature so impartially offers. This is
a right which is natural and inalienable; it is a right
which vests in every human being as he enters the world,
and which, during his continuance in the world, can be
limited only by the equal rights of others. There is in
nature no such thing as a fee simple in land. There is on
earth no power which can rightfully make a grant of
exclusive ownership in land. If all existing men were to
unite to grant away their equal rights, they could not
grant away the right of those who follow them. For what
are we but tenants for a day? Have we made the earth that
we should determine the rights of those who after us
shall tenant it in their turn? The Almighty, who created
the earth for man and man for the earth, has entailed it
upon all the generations of the children of men by a
decree written upon the constitution of all things
— a decree which no human action can bar and no
prescription determine, Let the parchments be ever so
many, or possession ever so long, natural justice can
recognize no right in one man to the possession and
enjoyment of land that is not equally the right of all
his fellows. — Progress & Poverty — Book
VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the Remedy: Injustice of
private property in land
HAS the first comer at a banquet the right to turn
back all the chairs and claim that none of the other
guests shall partake of the food provided, except as they
make terms with him? Does the first man who presents a
ticket at the door of a theater and passes in, acquire by
his priority the right to shut the doors and have the
performance go on for him alone? Does the first passenger
who enters a railroad car obtain the right to scatter his
baggage over all the seats and compel the passengers who
come in after him to stand up?
The cases are perfectly analogous. We arrive and we
depart, guests at a banquet continually spread,
spectators and participants in an entertainment where
there is room for all who come; passengers from station
to station, on an orb that whirls through space —
our rights to take and possess cannot be exclusive; they
must be bounded everywhere by the equal rights of others.
Just as the passenger in a railroad car may spread
himself and his baggage over as many seats as he pleases,
until other passengers come in, so may a settler take and
use as much land as he chooses, until it is needed by
others — a fact which is shown by the land
acquiring a value — when his right must be
curtailed by the equal rights of the others, and no
priority of appropriation can give a right which will bar
these equal rights of others. — Progress &
Poverty — Book VII, Chapter 1, Justice of the
Remedy: Injustice of private property in land ...
go to "Gems from
George"
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