Free Land
H.G. Brown:
Significant Paragraphs from Henry George's Progress &
Poverty, Chapter 4: Land Speculation Causes Reduced
Wages
The immense area over which the population of the
United States is scattered shows this. The man who sets
out from the Eastern Seaboard in search of the margin of
cultivation, where he may obtain land without paying
rent, must, like the man who swam the river to get a
drink, pass for long distances through half-tilled farms,
and traverse vast areas of virgin soil, before he reaches
the point where land can be had free of rent i.e., by
homestead entry or pre-emption. He (and, with him, the
margin of cultivation) is forced so much farther than he
otherwise need have gone, by the speculation which is
holding these unused lands in expectation of increased
value in the future. And when he settles, he will, in his
turn, take up, if he can, more land than he can use, in
the belief that it will soon become valuable; and so
those who follow him are again forced farther on than the
necessities of production require, carrying the margin of
cultivation to still less productive, because still more
remote points. ...
read the whole chapter
Place one hundred men on an island from which there
is no escape, and whether you make one of these men the
absolute owner of the other ninety-nine, or the
absolute owner of the soil of the island, will make no
difference either to him or to them. In the one case,
as the other, the one will be the absolute master of
the ninety-nine — his power extending even to
life and death, for simply to refuse them permission to
live upon the island would be to force them into the
sea.
Upon a larger scale, and through more complex
relations, the same cause must operate in the same way
and to the same end — the ultimate result, the
enslavement of laborers, becoming apparent just as the
pressure increases which compels them to live on and
from land which is treated as the exclusive property of
others.
Yet, it will be said: As every man has a right to
the use and enjoyment of nature, the man who is using
land must be permitted the exclusive right to its use
in order that he may get the full benefit of his labor.
But there is no difficulty in determining where the
individual right ends and the common right begins. A
delicate and exact test is supplied by value, and with
its aid there is no difficulty, no matter how dense
population may become, in determining and securing the
exact rights of each, the equal rights of all.
The value of land, as we have seen, is the
price of monopoly. It is not the absolute, but the
relative, capability of land that determines its value.
No matter what may be its intrinsic qualities land that
is no better than other land which may be had for the
using can have no value. And the value of land always
measures the difference between it and the best land
that may be had for the using. Thus, the value
of land expresses in exact and tangible form the right
of the community in land held by an individual; and
rent expresses the exact amount which the individual
should pay to the community to satisfy the equal rights
of all other members of the community. ...
read the whole chapter
Henry George:
Progress and Poverty:
Section VII: Justice of the Remedy; Chapter 5: Of Property
in Land in the United States
In short, the American people have failed to see the
essential injustice of private property in land, because
as yet they have not felt its full effects. This public
domain — the vast extent of land yet to be reduced
to private possession, the enormous common to which the
faces of the energetic were always turned, has been the
great fact that, since the days when the first
settlements began to fringe the Atlantic Coast, has
formed our national character and colored our national
thought. It is not that we have eschewed a titled
aristocracy and abolished primogeniture; that we elect
all our officers from school director up to president;
that our laws run in the name of the people, instead of
in the name of a prince; that the State knows no
religion, and our judges wear no wigs — that we
have been exempted from the ills that Fourth of July
orators used to point to as characteristic of the effete
despotisms of the Old World. The general
intelligence, the general comfort, the active invention,
the power of adaptation and assimilation, the free,
independent spirit, the energy and hopefulness that have
marked our people, are not causes, but results —
they have sprung from unfenced land. This
public domain has been the transmuting force which has
turned the thriftless, unambitious European peasant into
the self-reliant Western farmer; it has given a
consciousness of freedom even to the dweller in crowded
cities, and has been a wellspring of hope even to those
who have never thought of taking refuge upon it. The
child of the people, as he grows to manhood in Europe,
finds all the best seats at the banquet of life marked
"taken," and must struggle with his fellows for the
crumbs that fall, without one chance in a thousand of
forcing or sneaking his way to a seat. In America,
whatever his condition, there has always been the
consciousness that the public domain lay behind him; and
the knowledge of this fact, acting and reacting, has
penetrated our whole national life, giving to it
generosity and independence, elasticity and ambition.
All that we are proud of in the American
character; all that makes our conditions and institutions
better than those of older countries, we may trace to the
fact that land has been cheap in the United States,
because new soil has been open to the
emigrant.
But our advance has reached the Pacific. Further west
we cannot go, and increasing population can but expand
north and south and fill up what has been passed over.
North, it is already filling up the valley of the Red
River, pressing into that of the Saskatchewan and
pre-empting Washington Territory; south, it is covering
western Texas and taking up the arable valleys of New
Mexico and Arizona.
The republic has entered upon a new era, an era in
which the monopoly of the land will tell with
accelerating effect. The great fact which has been so
potent is ceasing to be. The public domain is almost gone
— a very few years will end its influence, already
rapidly failing. I do not mean to say that there will be
no public domain. For a long time to come there will be
millions of acres of public lands carried on the books of
the Land Department. But it must be remembered that the
best part of the continent for agricultural purposes is
already overrun, and that it is the poorest land that is
left. It must be remembered that what remains comprises
the great mountain ranges, the sterile deserts, the high
plains fit only for grazing. And it must be remembered
that much of this land which figures in the reports as
open to settlement is unsurveyed land, which has been
appropriated by possessory claims or locations which do
not appear until the land is returned as surveyed.
California figures on the books of the Land Department as
the greatest land state of the Union, containing nearly
100,000,000 acres of public land — something like
one-twelfth of the whole public domain. Yet so much of
this is covered by railroad grants or held in the way of
which I have spoken; so much consists of untillable
mountains or plains which require irrigation; so much is
monopolized by locations which command the water, that as
a matter of fact it is difficult to point the immigrant
to any part of the state where he can take up a farm on
which he can settle and maintain a family, and so men,
weary of the quest, end by buying land or renting it on
shares. It is not that there is any real scarcity of land
in California — for, an empire in herself,
California will some day maintain a population as large
as that of France — but appropriation has got ahead
of the settler and manages to keep just ahead of him. ...
read the whole chapter
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
WHEREVER land has an exchange value there is rent in
the economic meaning of the term. Wherever land having a
value is used, either by owner or hirer, there is rent
actual; wherever it is not used, but still has a value,
there is rent potential. It is this capacity of yielding
rent which gives value to land. . . . No matter what are
its capabilities, land can yield no rent and have no
value until some one is willing to give labor or the
results of labor for the privilege of using it; and what
anyone will thus give, depends not upon the capacity of
the land, but upon its capacity as compared with that of
land that can be had for nothing. —
Progress & Poverty
Book III, Chapter 2 — The Laws of Distribution:
Rent and the Law of Rent
STATED reversely, the law of rent is necessarily the law
of wages and interest taken together, for it is the
assertion, that no matter what be the production which
results from the application of labor and capital, these
two factors will only receive in wages and interest such
part of the produce as they could have produced on land
free to them without the payment of rent — that is
the least productive land or point in use. —
Progress & Poverty
Book III, Chapter 2 — The Laws of Distribution:
Rent and the Law of Rent
... go to "Gems
from George"
Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F. Post's
Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and Charts (1894)
— Appendix: FAQ
Q30. What effect would the single tax have on
immigration? Would it cause an influx of foreigners from
different nations?
A. If adopted in one country of great natural
opportunities, and not in others, its tendency would not
only be to cause an influx of foreigners, but also to
make their coming highly desirable. Our own experience in
the United States, when we had an abundance of free land
and were begging the populations of the world to come to
us, offers a faint suggestion of what might be expected.
... read the
book
Charles B. Fillebrown: A Catechism of
Natural Taxation, from Principles of Natural
Taxation (1917)
Q43. Do all people, then, pay ground
rent?
A. Yes, in proportion as they are users of land having
any value.
... read
the whole article
Clarence Darrow:
How to Abolish Unfair Taxation (1913)
Everybody nowadays is anxious to help do something for
the poor, especially they who are on the backs of the
poor; they will do anything that is not fundamental.
Nobody ever dreams of giving the poor a chance to help
themselves. The reformers in this state have passed a law
prohibiting women from working more than eight hours in
one day in certain industries — so much do women
love to work that they must be stopped by law. If any
benevolent heathen see fit to come here and do work, we
send them to gaol or send them back where they came
from.
All these prohibitory laws are froth. You can only
cure effects by curing the cause. Every sin and every
wrong that exists in the world is the product of law, and
you cannot cure it without curing the cause. Lawyers, as
a class, are very stupid. What would you think of a
doctor, who, finding a case of malaria, instead of
draining the swamp, would send the patient to gaol, and
leave the swamp where it is? We are seeking to improve
conditions of life by improving symptoms.
Land Basic
No man created the earth, but to a large extent all
take from the earth a portion of it and mould it into
useful things for the use of man. Without land man cannot
live; without access to it man cannot labor. First of
all, he must have the earth, and this he cannot have
access to until the single tax is applied. It has been
proven by the history of the human race that the single
tax does work, and that it will work as its advocates
claim. For instance, man turned from Europe, filled with
a population of the poor, and discovered the great
continent of America. Here, when he could not get
profitable employment, he went on the free land and
worked for himself, and in those early days there were no
problems of poverty, no wonderfully rich and no extremely
poor — because there was cheap land. Men could go
to work for themselves, and thus take the surplus off the
labor market. There were no beggars in the early days. It
was only when the landlord got in his work — when
the earth monopoly was complete — that the great
mass of men had to look to a boss for a job.
All the remedial laws on earth can scarcely help the
poor when the earth is monopolized. Men must live from
the earth, they must till the soil, dig the coal and iron
and cut down the forest. Wise men know it, and cunning
men know it, and so a few have reached out their hands
and grasped the earth; and they say, "These mines of coal
and iron, which it took nature ages and ages to store,
belong to me; and no man can touch them until he sees fit
to pay the tribute I demand." ...
read the whole speech
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