Association in Equality
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
MENTAL power is the motor of progress, and men tend to
advance in proportion to the mental power expended in
progression — the mental power which is devoted to
the extension of knowledge, the improvement of methods,
and the betterment of social conditions. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book X, Chapter 3, The Law of Human
Progress
To compare society to a boat. Her progress through
the water will not depend upon the exertion of her crew,
but upon the exertion devoted to propelling her. This
will be lessened by any expenditure of force required for
baling, or any expenditure of force in fighting among
themselves or in pulling in different directions.
Now, as in a separated state the whole powers of man are
required to maintain existence, and mental power is only
set free for higher uses by the association of men in
communities, which permits the division of labor and all
the economies which come with the co-operation of
increased numbers, association is the first essential of
progress. Improvement becomes possible as men come
together in peaceful association, and the wider and
closer the association, the greater the possibilities of
improvement. And as the wasteful expenditure of mental
power in conflict becomes greater or less as the moral
law which accords to each an equality of rights is
ignored or is recognized, equality (or justice) is the
second essential of progress.
Thus association in equality is the law of progress.
Association frees mental power for expenditure in
improvement, and equality (or justice, or freedom —
for the terms here signify the same thing, the
recognition of the moral law) prevents the dissipation of
this power in fruitless struggles. —
Progress & Poverty
— Book X, Chapter 3, The Law of Human Progress
... go to "Gems from
George"
Weld Carter: An
Introduction to Henry George
Mason Gaffney:
Interview: Is There a Conspiracy in the Teaching of
Economics and History within the American Education
System?
TPR - Explain exactly what
would happen if America began shifting taxes off of
everything else and onto land value.
MG - Exactly? The
effects are too great, too pervasive to predict
exactly.
- It would unleash massive forces of production,
exchange, capital formation, and building, forces now
trapped and frustrated in the coils of our complex,
counterproductive tax mess.
- It would enhance the supply of goods and
services while simultaneously lowering taxes on the poor
and the workers, thus reconciling the needs of both
efficiency and equity, in one stroke.
- It would raise taxes on the richest Americans,
and alien landowners, too, without diluting in the least
their incentives to work, to create capital, or to hire
workers: it would actually fortify those
incentives.
- It would spring people loose to renew large
parts of our older cities, and rehab what they do not re
place.
- It would let local school districts support
education at much higher levels than now, without fear of
driving away business.
- It would satisfy the demand for housing on
land that Nature suited for housing, without invading
flood plains, steep slopes, remote deserts, and other
places that cost society dearly to serve and
rescue.
- It would raise the demand for labor, taking
people off welfare and keeping them out of
jails.
One could go on at length, but Henry
George summed it up in three words: "Association in
Equality." Civilization advances when those conditions
are met, and declines when they are denied. America has
been denying them; we are all paying the price.
Read the entire
article
Judge Samuel Seabury:
An Address delivered upon the 100th anniversary of the
birth of Henry George
WE are met to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the
birth of Henry George. We meet, therefore, in a spirit of
joy and thanksgiving for the great life which he devoted
to the service of humanity. To very few of the children
of men is it given to act the part of a great teacher who
makes an outstanding contribution toward revealing the
basic principles to which human society must adhere if it
is to walk in the way which leads to freedom. This Henry
George did, and in so doing he expressed himself with a
clarity of thought and diction which has rarely been
surpassed. ...
read the whole speech
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