Caesarism
Jesus said "Render unto Caesar that which is
Caesar's." And perhaps he was making a comment about what
rightly belonged to Caesar. Caesar was not part of the
community to which Jesus was speaking. What, if anything,
was rightly Caesar's? Was he somehow entitled to a
portion of the fruits of the labor provided by the
community? By what right?
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.) ...
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. (51.)
This, like much else that your Holiness says, is
masked in the use of the indefinite terms “private
property” and “private owner” — a
want of precision in the use of words that has doubtless
aided in the confusion of your own thought. But the
context leaves no doubt that by private property you mean
private property in land, and by private owner, the
private owner of land.
The contention, thus made, that private
property in land is from nature, not from man, has no
other basis than the confounding of ownership with
possession and the ascription to property in land of what
belongs to its contradictory, property in the proceeds of
labor. You do not attempt to show for it any other basis,
nor has any one else ever attempted to do so. That
private property in the products of labor is from nature
is clear, for nature gives such things to labor and to
labor alone. Of every article of this kind, we know that
it came into being as nature’s response to the
exertion of an individual man or of individual men
— given by nature directly and exclusively to him
or to them. Thus there inheres in such things a right of
private property, which originates from and goes back to
the source of ownership, the maker of the thing. This
right is anterior to the state and superior to its
enactments, so that, as we hold, it is a violation of
natural right and an injustice to the private owner for
the state to tax the processes and products of labor.
They do not belong to Caesar. They are things
that God, of whom nature is but an expression, gives to
those who apply for them in the way he has appointed
— by labor.
But who will dare trace the individual ownership of
land to any grant from the Maker of land? What does
nature give to such ownership? how does she in any way
recognize it? Will any one show from difference of form
or feature, of stature or complexion, from dissection of
their bodies or analysis of their powers and needs, that
one man was intended by nature to own land and another to
live on it as his tenant? That which derives its
existence from man and passes away like him, which is
indeed but the evanescent expression of his labor, man
may hold and transfer as the exclusive property of the
individual; but how can such individual ownership attach
to land, which existed before man was, and which
continues to exist while the generations of men come and
go — the unfailing storehouse that the Creator
gives to man for “the daily supply of his daily
wants”?
Clearly, the private ownership of land is from the
state, not from nature. Thus, not merely can no objection
be made on the score of morals when it is proposed that
the state shall abolish it altogether, but insomuch as it
is a violation of natural right, its existence involving
a gross injustice on the part of the state, an
“impious violation of the benevolent intention of
the Creator,” it is a moral duty that the state so
abolish it.
So far from there being anything unjust in taking the
full value of landownership for the use of the community,
the real injustice is in leaving it in private hands
— an injustice that amounts to robbery and
murder.
And when your Holiness shall see this I have no fear
that you will listen for one moment to the impudent plea
that before the community can take what God intended it
to take — before men who have been disinherited of
their natural rights can be restored to them, the present
owners of land shall first be compensated.
For not only will you see that the single tax will
directly and largely benefit small landowners, whose
interests as laborers and capitalists are much greater
than their interests as landowners, and that though the
great landowners — or rather the propertied class
in general among whom the profits of landownership are
really divided through mortgages, rent-charges, etc.
— would relatively lose, they too would be absolute
gainers in the increased prosperity and improved morals;
but more quickly, more strongly, more peremptorily than
from any calculation of gains or losses would your duty
as a man, your faith as a Christian, forbid you to listen
for one moment to any such paltering with right and
wrong.
Where the state takes some land for public uses it is
only just that those whose land is taken should be
compensated, otherwise some landowners would be treated
more harshly than others. But where, by a measure
affecting all alike, rent is appropriated for the benefit
of all, there can be no claim to compensation.
Compensation in such case would be a continuance of the
same in another form — the giving to landowners in
the shape of interest of what they before got as rent.
Your Holiness knows that justice and injustice are not
thus to be juggled with, and when you fully realize that
land is really the storehouse that God owes to all his
children, you will no more listen to any demand for
compensation for restoring it to them than Moses would
have listened to a demand that Pharaoh should be
compensated before letting the children of Israel go.
Compensated for what? For giving up what has been
unjustly taken? The demand of landowners for compensation
is not that. We do not seek to spoil the Egyptians. We do
not ask that what has been unjustly taken from laborers
shall be restored. We are willing that bygones should be
bygones and to leave dead wrongs to bury their dead. We
propose to let those who by the past appropriation of
land values have taken the fruits of labor to retain what
they have thus got. We merely propose that for the future
such robbery of labor shall cease — that for the
future, not for the past, landholders shall pay to the
community the rent that to the community is justly due.
... read
the whole letter
Henry George: Political
Dangers (Chapter 2 of Social
Problems, 1883)
[11] The rise in the United
States of monstrous fortunes, the aggregation of enormous
wealth in the hands of corporations, necessarily implies
the loss by the people of governmental control.
Democratic forms may be maintained, but there can be as
much tyranny and misgovernment under democratic forms as
any other — in fact, they lend themselves most
readily to tyranny and misgovernment. Forms count for
little. The Romans expelled their kings, and continued to
abhor the very name of king. But under the name of
Cæsars and Imperators, that at first meant no more
than our "Boss," they crouched before tyrants more
absolute than kings. We have already, under the popular
name of "bosses," developed political Cæsars in
municipalities and states. If this development continues,
in time there will come a national boss. We are young but
we are growing. The day may arrive when the "Boss of
America" will be to the modern world what Cæsar was
to the Roman world. This, at least, is certain:
Democratic government in more than name can exist only
where wealth is distributed with something like equality
— where the great mass of citizens are personally
free and independent, neither fettered by their poverty
nor made subject by their wealth. There is, after all,
some sense in a property qualification. The man who is
dependent on a master for his living is not a free man.
To give the suffrage to slaves is only to give votes to
their owners. That universal suffrage may add to, instead
of decreasing, the political power of wealth we see when
mill-owners and mine operators vote their hands. The
freedom to earn, without fear or favor, a comfortable
living, ought to go with the freedom to vote. Thus alone
can a sound basis for republican institutions be secured.
How can a man be said to have a country where he has no
right to a square inch of soil; where he has nothing but
his hands, and. urged by starvation, must bid against his
fellows for the privilege of using them? When it comes to
voting tramps, some principle has been carried to a
ridiculous and dangerous extreme. I have known elections
to be decided by the carting of paupers from the
almshouse to the polls. But such decisions can scarcely
be in the interest of good government. ... read the
entire essay
Charles T. Root — Not
a Single Tax! (1925)
... let us lay down and briefly defend the proposition
that —
Taxation as a means of meeting the proper
expenses of government is oppressive, unjust,
inexpedient and unnecessary.
This proposition will strike a good many readers as
absurd, but all must at least recognize the timeliness of
the topic and the importance of any contribution to the
discussion of a subject which is agitating the whole
civilized world, for the methods, subjects and amounts of
taxation are among the pressing problems of every
country.
The most obvious question which arises in the mind of
anyone who reads for the first time the proposition above
laid down is this:
"If taxation is unnecessary, what is to take its
place? Government and its functions are increasingly
expensive. They require a lot of money. Where is it to
come from?" The answer may be placed in the form of a
second proposition:
Every community, whatever its political name and
extent — village, city, state or province or
nation — has its own normal, unfailing income,
growing with the growth of the community and always
adequate to meet necessary governmental
expenditure.
To explain: Every community has an indefeasible
original right to the land on which it exists, and to all
the natural, unmodified properties and advantages of that
particular area of the earth's surface. To this land in
its natural state, undrained, unfenced, unfertilized,
unplanted and unoccupied, including its waters, its
contents and its location, every individual in the
community (which may consist of any political unit
selected) has an equal right, while all the individuals
together have a joint right to the value for use which
society has conferred upon these natural advantages.
This value for use is known as "Land Value," or by the
not particularly descriptive but generally adopted name
of "Economic Rent." ...
But make it plain to the wayfaring man that taxation
can be abolished and will be abolished whenever the
voters of any political unit so decree, and a force of
hope and purpose will be liberated which must bring
nearer the time when the things that are the community's
will be rendered to it, and the things which are the
individual's will be left in his unmolested possession.
The watchword of our friends the Georgeites is "A Single
Tax." The true slogan is "Not a Single Tax!"; and the
triumph of the cause behind that slogan would cut more of
the taproots of poverty, vice and social unrest than any
other progressive step which is a legislative
possibility.
read the whole article
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