Is There a Right to
Employment?
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
NOW, why is it that men, have to work for such low
wages? Because, if they were to demand higher wages,
there are plenty of unemployed men ready to step into
their places. It is this mass of unemployed men who
compel that fierce competition that drives wages down to
the point of bare subsistence. Why is it that there are
men who cannot get employment? Did you ever think what a
strange thing it is that men cannot find
employment? If men cannot find an employer, why can
they not employ themselves? Simply because they are shut
out from the element on which human labor can alone be
exerted; men are compelled to compete with each other for
the wages of an employer, because they have been robbed
of the natural opportunities of employing themselves;
because they cannot find a piece of God's world on which
to work without paying some other human creature for the
privilege. —
The Crime of Poverty
WE laud as public benefactors those who, as we say,
"furnish employment." We are constantly talking as though
this "furnishing of employment," this "giving of work"
were the greatest boon that could be conferred upon
society. To listen to much that is talked and much that
is written, one would think that the cause of poverty is
that there is not work enough for so many people, and
that if the Creator had made the rock harder, the soil
less fertile, iron as scarce as gold, and gold as
diamonds; or if ships would sink and cities burn down
oftener, there would be less poverty, because there would
be more work to do. —
Social Problems,
Chapter 8 — That We All Might Be Rich
YOU assert the right of laborers to employment and their
right to receive from their employers a certain
indefinite wage. No such rights exist. No one has a right
to demand employment of another, or to demand higher
wages than the other is willing to give, or in any way to
put pressure on another to make him raise such wages
against his will. There can be no better moral
justification for such demands on employers by
working-men than there would be for employers demanding
that working-men shall be compelled to work for them when
they do not want to, and to accept wages lower than they
are willing to take. —
The Condition of Labor, an Open Letter to Pope Leo
XIII
THE natural right which each man has, is not that of
demanding employment or wages from another man, but that
of employing himself — that of applying by his own
labor to the inexhaustible storehouse which the Creator
has in the land provided for all men. Were that
storehouse open, as by the single tax we would open it,
the natural demand for labor would keep pace with the
supply, the man who sold labor and the man who bought it
would become free exchangers for mutual advantage, and
all cause for dispute between workman and employer would
be gone. For then, all being free to employ themselves,
the mere opportunity to labor would cease to seem a boon;
and since no one would work for another for less, all
things considered, than he could earn by working for
himself, wages would necessarily rise to their full
value, and the relations of workman and employer be
regulated by mutual interest and convenience. —
The Condition of Labor, an Open Letter to Pope Leo
XIII
... go to "Gems
from George"
Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F. Post's
Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and Charts (1894)
— Appendix: FAQ
Q26. Hasn't every man who needs it a right to be
employed by the government?
A. No. But he has a right to have government secure him
in the enjoyment of his equal right to the opportunities
for employment that nature and social growth supply. When
government secures him in that respect, if he cannot get
work it is because (1) he does not offer the kind of
service that people want; or (2) he is incapable. His
remedy, if he does not offer the kind of service that
people want, is either to make people see that they are
mistaken, or go to work at something else; if he is
incapable, his remedy is to improve himself. In no case
has he a right to government interference in his behalf,
either through schemes to make work, or by bounties or
tariffs. ... read
the book
from http://members.aol.com/_ht_a/tma68/geolib.htm
What Is Geolibertarianism?
Geolibertarians are simply libertarians who take the
principle of self-ownership to its logical conclusion:
Just as the right to one's self implies the right
to the fruit of one's labor (i.e., the right to
property), the right to the fruit of one's labor implies
the right to labor, and the right to labor implies the
right to labor — somewhere. Hence John Locke's
proviso that one has "property" in land only to the
extent that there is "enough, and as good left in common
for others." When there is not, land begins to have
rental
value. Thus, the rental value of land reflects the extent
to which Locke's proviso has been violated, thereby
making community-collection of rent, or CCR, a just and
necessary means of upholding the Lockean principle of
private property. In the late 19th century CCR was known
as the "Single Tax"— a term that was (and is) used
to denote Henry
George's proposal to abolish all taxes save for a
single "tax" on the value of land, irrespective of the
value of improvements in or on it.
|
To share this page with a friend:
right click, choose "send," and add your
comments.
|
|
Red links have not been
visited; .
Green links are pages you've seen
|
Essential Documents pertinent
to this theme:
essential_documents
|
|