Corruption of Government
Henry George: Political
Dangers (Chapter 2 of Social
Problems, 1883)
[06] Liberty is natural.
Primitive perceptions are of the equal rights of the
citizen, and political organization always starts from
this base. It is as social development goes on that we
find power concentrating, in institutions based upon the
equality of rights passing into institutions which make
the many the slaves of the few. How this is we may see.
In all institutions which involve the lodgment of
governing power there is, with social growth, a tendency
to the exaltation of their function and the
centralization of their power, and in the stronger of
these institutions a tendency to the absorption of the
powers of the rest. Thus the tendency of social growth is
to make government the business of a special class. And
as numbers increase and the power and importance of each
become less and less as compared with that of all, so,
for this reason, does government tend to pass beyond the
scrutiny and control of the masses. The leader of a
handful of warriors, or head man of a little village, can
command or govern only by common consent, and anyone
aggrieved can readily appeal to his fellows. But when a
tribe becomes a nation and the village expands to a
populous country, the powers of the chieftain, without
formal addition, become practically much greater. For
with increase of numbers scrutiny of his acts becomes
more difficult, it is harder and harder successfully to
appeal from them, and the aggregate power which he
directs becomes irresistible as against individuals. And
gradually, as power thus concentrates, primitive ideas
are lost, and the habit of thought grows up which regards
the masses as born but for the service of their
rulers.
[07] Thus the mere
growth of society involves danger of the gradual
conversion of government into something independent of
and beyond the people, and the gradual seizure of its
powers by a ruling class — though not necessarily a
class marked off by personal titles and a hereditary
status, for, as history shows, personal titles and
hereditary status do not accompany the concentration of
power, but follow it. The same methods which, in
a little town where each knows his neighbor and matters
of common interest are under the common eye, enable the
citizens freely to govern themselves, may, in a great
city, as we have in many cases seen, enable an organized
ring of plunderers to gain and hold the government. So,
too, as we see in Congress, and even in our State
legislatures, the growth of the country and the greater
number of interests make the proportion of the votes of a
representative, of which his constituents know or care to
know, less and less. And so, too, the executive and
judicial departments tend constantly to pass beyond the
scrutiny of the people.
[08] But to the changes
produced by growth are, with us, added the changes
brought about by improved industrial methods. The
tendency of steam and of machinery is to the division of
labor, to the concentration of wealth and power. Workmen
are becoming massed by hundreds and thousands in the
employ of single individuals and firms; small
storekeepers and merchants are becoming the clerks and
salesmen of great business houses; we have already
corporations whose revenues and pay-rolls belittle those
of the greatest States. And with this concentration grows
the facility of combination among these great business
interests. How readily the railroad companies, the coal
operators, the steel producers, even the match
manufacturers, combine, either to regulate prices or to
use the powers of government! The tendency in all
branches of industry is to the formation of rings against
which the individual is helpless, and which exert their
power upon government whenever their interests may thus
be served.
[10] The more corrupt a
government the easier wealth can use it. Where
legislation is to be bought, the rich make the laws;
where justice is to be purchased, the rich have the ear
of the courts. And if, for this reason, great wealth does
not absolutely prefer corrupt government to pure
government, it becomes none the less a corrupting
influence. A community composed of very rich and very
poor falls an easy prey to whoever can seize power. The
very poor have not spirit and intelligence enough to
resist; the very rich have too much at stake.
[15] We are steadily
differentiating a governing class, or rather a class of
Pretorians, who make a business of gaining political
power and then selling it. The type of the rising party
leader is not the orator or statesman of an earlier day,
but the shrewd manager, who knows how to handle the
workers, how to combine pecuniary interests, how to
obtain money and to spend it, how to gather to himself
followers and to secure their allegiance. One party
machine is becoming complementary to the other party
machine, the politicians, like the railroad managers,
having discovered that combination pays better than
competition. So rings are made impregnable and great
pecuniary interests secure their ends no matter how
elections go. There are sovereign States so completely in
the hands of rings and corporations that it seems as if
nothing short of a revolutionary uprising of the people
could dispossess them. Indeed, whether the General
Government has not already passed beyond popular control
may be doubted. Certain it is that possession of the
General Government has for some time past secured
possession. And for one term, at least, the Presidential
chair has been occupied by a man not elected to it. This,
of course, was largely due to the crookedness of the man
who was elected, and to the lack of principle in his
supporters. Nevertheless, it occurred.... read the
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