.
On the Importance of Property
Distribution |
| [From a letter to
James Sullivan, 1776] |
John Adams viewed broad land
ownership as a key ingredient in maintaining a balance of
political power. He was greatly influenced by seventeenth-century
philosopher James Harrington, who argued that the widespread
distribution of property dispersed power. Adams believed that when
"economic power became concentrated in a few hands, then
political power flowed to those possessors and away from the
citizens, ultimately resulting in an oligarchy or tyranny.
|
The balance of power in a society, accompanies the balance of property
in land. The only possible way, then, of preserving the balance of power
on the side of equal liberty and public virtue, is to make the
acquisition of land easy to every member of society; to make a division
of land into small quantities, so that the multitude may he possessed of
landed estates. If the multitude is possessed of the balance of real
estate, the multitude will take care of the liberty, virtue, and
interest of the multitude, in all acts of government.
|