Tyranny
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
WE should keep our own market for our
own producers, seems by many to be regarded as the
same kind of a proposition as, We should
keep our own pasture for our own cows; whereas, in
truth, it is such a proposition as, We
should keep our own appetites for our own cookery,
or, We should keep our own
transportation for our own legs. —
Protection or Free Trade, Chapter 11: The Home
Market and Home Trade -
econlib
THE protection of the masses has in all times been the
pretense of tyranny — the plea of monarchy, of
aristocracy, of special privilege of every kind. The
slave owners justified slavery as protecting the slaves.
British misrule in Ireland is upheld on the ground that
it is for the protection of the Irish. But, whether under
a monarchy or under a republic, is there an instance in
the history of the world in which the "protection" of the
laboring masses has not meant their oppression? The
protection that those who have got the law-making power
into their hands have given labor, has at best always
been the protection that man gives to cattle — he
protects them that he may use and eat them. —
Protection or Free Trade — Chapter 2,
Clearing Ground
econlib
IT is never intimated that the land-owner or the
capitalist needs protection. They, it is always assumed,
can take care of themselves. It is only the poor
workingman who must be protected. What is labor that it
should so need protection? Is not labor the creator of
capital, the producer of all wealth? Is it not the men
who labor that feed and clothe all others? Is it not
true, as has been said, that the three great orders of
society are "workingmen, beggarmen, and thieves?" How,
then, does it come that workingmen alone need protection?
— Protection or Free Trade — Chapter
2, Clearing Ground
econlib -|- abridged
WHAT should we think of human laws framed for the
government of a country which should compel each family
to keep constantly on their guard against every other
family, to expend a large part of their time and labor in
preventing exchanges with their neighbors, and to seek
their own prosperity by opposing the natural efforts of
other families to become prosperous? Yet the protective
theory implies that laws such as these have been imposed
by the Creator upon the families of men who tenant this
earth. It implies that by virtue of social laws, as
immutable as the physical laws, each nation must stand
jealously on guard against every other nation and erect
artificial obstacles to national intercourse.—
Protection or Free Trade, Chapter 4: Protection
as a Universal Need
econlib
TO attempt to make a nation prosperous by preventing it
from buying from other nations is as absurd as it would
be to attempt to make a man prosperous by preventing him
from buying from other men. How this operates in the case
of the individual we can see from that practice which,
since its application in the Irish land agitation, has
come to be called "boycotting." Captain Boycott, upon
whom has been thrust the unenviable fame of having his
name turned into a verb, was in fact "protected." He had
a protective tariff of the most efficient kind built
around him by a neighborhood decree more effective than
act of Parliament. No one would sell him labor, no one
would sell him milk or bread or meat or any service or
commodity whatever. But instead of growing prosperous,
this much-protected man had to fly from a place where his
own market was thus reserved for his own productions.
What protectionists ask us to do to ourselves in
reserving our home market for home producers, is in kind
what the Land Leaguers did to Captain Boycott. They ask
us to boycott ourselves. — Protection or Free
Trade, Chapter 11: The Home Market and Home Trade -
econlib
WHEN not caused by artificial obstacles, any tendency in
trade to take a certain course is proof that it ought to
take that course, and restrictions are harmful because
they restrict, and in proportion as they restrict. To
assert that the way for men to become healthy and strong
is for them to force into their stomachs what nature
tries to reject, to regulate the play of their lungs by
bandages, or to control the circulation of their blood by
ligatures, would be not a whit more absurd than to assert
that the way for nations to become rich is for them to
restrict the natural tendency to trade. —
Protection or Free Trade, Chapter 6: Trade -
econlib
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