Do Justice and Give Freedom
Henry George: The Condition of
Labor — An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response
to Rerum Novarum (1891)
But the fundamental difference — the difference
I ask your Holiness specially to note, is in this:
socialism in all its phases looks on the evils of our
civilization as springing from the inadequacy or
inharmony of natural relations, which must be
artificially organized or improved. In its idea there
devolves on the state the necessity of intelligently
organizing the industrial relations of men; the
construction, as it were, of a great machine whose
complicated parts shall properly work together under
the direction of human intelligence. This is the
reason why socialism tends toward atheism. Failing to
see the order and symmetry of natural law, it fails
to recognize God.
On the other hand, we who call ourselves
single-tax men (a name which expresses merely our
practical propositions) see in the social and
industrial relations of men not a machine which
requires construction, but an organism which needs
only to be suffered to grow. We see in the natural
social and industrial laws such harmony as we see in
the adjustments of the human body, and that as far
transcends the power of man’s intelligence to
order and direct as it is beyond man’s
intelligence to order and direct the vital movements
of his frame. We see in these social and
industrial laws so close a relation to the moral law
as must spring from the same Authorship, and that
proves the moral law to be the sure guide of man
where his intelligence would wander and go astray.
Thus, to us, all that is needed to remedy the evils
of our time is to do justice and give
freedom. This is the reason why our beliefs
tend toward, nay are indeed the only beliefs
consistent with a firm and reverent faith in God, and
with the recognition of his law as the supreme law
which men must follow if they would secure prosperity
and avoid destruction. This is the reason why to us
political economy only serves to show the depth of
wisdom in the simple truths which common people heard
gladly from the lips of Him of whom it was said with
wonder, “Is not this the Carpenter of
Nazareth?”
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. ... read the whole
letter
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