.
| Some Fruits
of Landlordism |
| [Reprinted from Twentieth
Century Magazine, April, 1910] |
NOTE: - No American thinker who wrought
under the compulsion of moral idealism during the last quarter of the
nineteenth century has exerted so profound an influence over lofty minds
or awakened so great passion for justice in so many earnest and
thoughtful men and women as did Henry George, the fundamental democrat
and most profound apostle of a land philosophy based on the granite of
eternal justice. Throughout America, and we may say throughout the
English-speaking world, a large proportion of those who are to-day
unselfishly battling for a nobler civilization marked by just social and
economic conditions, have at some time come under the magic of Mr.
George's moral enthusiasm and his clear and convincing logic. Among this
number are business men and statesmen, novelists and philosophers,
journalists and poets. Some have failed to find in Mr. George's
philosophy the full solution of the great problems confronting us.
Others believe it to furnish the basis for a sound social and economic
order. Among the latter class is the author of the accompanying paper on
English landlordism, Mr. Joseph Fels, one of America's most successful
business men. After making a fortune he is devoting a large part of his
wealth and energies to a systematic educational agitation aiming at
arousing men and women who dare and care to think, in America, Europe
and Australasia, to the basic facts of Mr. George's land philosophy and
to the great underlying principles that differentiate a democracy from
all forms of class rule. While the masters of the feudalism of
privileged wealth are reaching out on every hand for unearned gold,
seizing and hoarding, hoarding and seizing, and not a few of them are
exerting a baleful influence on government, church, school and press,
Mr. Fels, now in England, now in America, is busily engaged in preaching
the gospel of freedom and fraternity based on equality of opportunities
and of rights. He is a successful man in the highest sense of the word,
for with him the earning of money is a means to an end - the means by
which he is striving to elevate, ennoble and develop the people and
immensely enlarge the boundaries of human happiness.
THE EDITOR
|
Since my return from England I have found it most difficult to convince
people of the intense and absorbing interest the English people have
taken in the recent election there, as well as in the economic questions
raised by the Budget. Our most exciting presidential elections are
apathetic by comparison, and I think the real reason why our English
cousins are so thoroughly aroused is that land-ownership and the
consequent individual appropriation of rent has been carried in England
to such an extreme that the people there have come to realize that some
immediate solution of the land question is of as paramount necessity to
them as an immediate means of rescue would be to a shipwrecked crew.
The English people are awake to the fact that under their very eyes the
land has been taken away from them. The commons have been fenced in to
make great estates and game preserves, while in towns and cities land is
held at such high prices that capital and labor cannot make a living on
it. As a consequence, thousands and thousands of native-born Englishmen
have been literally forced off the land, thrown out of employment and
left without any right in the country they still call theirs, except to
tramp the highways. This condition has been brought about by practically
exempting land from taxation. Although everybody knows that the value of
land in England has increased many thousandfold in the past two hundred
years, the landed interests have thus far succeeded in preventing any
increase in the valuation of their holdings for the purpose of taxation
since a valuation made in the year 1696.
The effect of this has been, first, as I have stated, to favor land
monopoly; secondly, to relieve landowners of their share of the expenses
of government; and, thirdly, to increase the tax burdens of all other
citizens. All exemptions from taxation and all tax-dodging work this
way. For every one who escapes, the heavier the burden is which the rest
have to bear, and as Tax Dodgers the Lords of England have long held the
championship. Their contemptible meanness towards the poor and
unfortunate almost surpasses belief. Stealing candy from children would
be considered a noble and generous act compared to the whole record of
the House of Lords in the matter of taxation.
Said Richard Cobden, speaking in the House of Commons, December 17,
1845 :-
"I warn ministers, and I warn landlords and the
aristocracy of this country, against forcing on the attention of the
middle and industrial classes, the subject of taxation. For
mighty as I consider the fraud and injustice of the Corn Laws, I
verily believe, if you were to bring forward the history of taxation
in this country for the last 150 years, you will find as black a
record against the landowners as even in the Corn Law itself. I warn
them against ripping up the subject of taxation. If they want another
league at the death of this one - if they want another organization
and a motive - then let them force the middle and industrial classes
to understand how they have been cheated, robbed and bamboozled."
Certainly no one can read the literature put out by the Liberals and
the speeches of the Cabinet Ministers without being impressed with the
overwhelming gravity of the situation in which the English people now
find themselves. As a political campaign of education alone, the recent
election has been remarkable, and the most strenuous defender of
landlordism is silenced when confronted with the records showing the
enormous incomes of the landlords, not in a few places only, but in
every county and shire in England. Every local newspaper and every
speaker could point to home illustrations and conditions showing the
effects of landlordism - how enormous the revenues of the great lords
were and how they had succeeded for so many centuries in shifting the
burden of taxation from themselves to the working classes. And if anyone
doubted the truth of these illustrations or the validity of the
speaker's argument he had only to read a landowner's attempted reply or
attend a Tory meeting and listen to a Tory speaker to become convinced
not only of the truth of the indictment against the landed gentry,
individually and collectively, but that here was a monstrous wrong that
called for immediate remedy. For it should not be overlooked, though it
often is, that the vast wealth which finds its way to the pockets of
English landlords must be produced by someone. It does not fall from
heaven, nor is it cast up by the sea. It is the product of human labor,
toil and endeavor, and when the pride and boast of any class in a
community is that they do not work, that neither they nor their
ancestors for many generations back were ever "tradesmen," and
when it is apparent that this class enjoys all the things which workers
or "tradesmen" produce, it must be equally manifest that some
men are working without getting while other men are getting without
working - that some are unjustly enriched while others are robbed.
It is, I am sure, such feelings as these which actuated the English
people at the last election. They have vaguely felt for a long time that
there was something wrong with their institution of landowning. The
fruits of it have begun to taste bitter. They do not yet clearly see all
the evils which flow from landlordism and many of them would like to
cure the evils without removing the cause, while many others honestly
think there must be some other remedy than taxation of land values, that
the time is not yet ripe for a change, etc., but these are in the
minority. They belong to the more comfortable classes which have not yet
felt the full force of an institution which is literally starving people
to death.
Speaking for myself as a Single Taxer and for those who think as I do,
I would be glad to see far more radical measures proposed than
Lloyd-George offers, but I am one of those who politically takes what he
can get, and then demands more, people of England challenge the
institution, hitherto so sacred to them, of private property in land;
when they begin, as they have begun, to question the right of landowners
to take all the rent. I look forward with renewed land hope to the time
when they will ask what right the landowners have to any rent at all.
And I think the logic of events, so to speak, will sooner or later drive
the English people to this position. It will be remembered that the
strictly analogous question of chattel slavery here in the United States
assumed this very phase. It began by an attempt to limit slave-holding,
to confine it within a certain territory; but those who favored such a
compromise were soon forced to take the positive stand either for
slavery or against it; and when the matter got to this point slavery was
doomed.
I have spoken particularly of English landlordism, and as if the evils
due to it were peculiar to that country; but I do not wish my remarks to
be so limited in their application. Landlordism here in the United
States is just the same as it is in England, and its effects are just as
bad. If its effects are not so apparent, it is simply because, until
very recently, we have had vast areas of free land. We are but
transplanted Englishmen largely and have brought with us to this country
English laws, customs and institutions, and like conditions may be
expected to produce like results.
In a recent issue of Life Uncle Sam is depicted as turning a
searchlight on Alaska and there discovering the land-grabbers at their
same old tricks. Uncle Sam need not have gone so far away from home to
find illustrations of how some men by seizing land (on which and from
which people alone can live) thereby virtually enslave their fellow-men,
and thus in a new country dedicated to freedom and boasted of as
Opportunity itself, reproduce all the poverty and degradation to which
so many millions of men in the Old World are condemned.
I sometimes think we Americans are the most easily fooled and tricked
people on earth. We have been fooled by a tariff so long that even the
recent great advance in the price of all necessities of life,
concurrently with the growth of immense fortunes to tariff beneficiaries
and deepening poverty on the part of the working classes, has not
aroused us to the realization of its iniquity. We complain of the
extortions of tariff-supported trusts and combines, and yet we send
lawyers who are, or have been, in the pay of these combinations as our
representatives to Washington, childishly expecting them to guard our
interests. Everywhere in our federal and municipal affairs the influence
and power of "Big Business" is apparent. Its interests are
always conserved while the people are treated as geese to be plucked,
just as that corresponding institution, the House of Lords, in England
has for so many years, fooled and plucked the English people.
I have assumed that the readers of The Twentieth Century Magazine
are familiar with the arguments usually advanced to prove the beneficial
results which flow from the taxation of landowners alone; how such a tax
would destroy landlordism or the monopoly by some of natural
opportunities to the exclusion of others; how it would relieve industry
of the heavy burdens now placed upon it in the form of taxes on things
which men make; how it would bring about an equitable distribution of
wealth so that those who made would have and poverty would thus
disappear; how it would make for better social conditions, purify our
political life and generally give human nature a chance to develop what
is best in it, instead of what is worst. The reason I have done this is
because my space is limited and, besides, the argument has been made so
often that now no intelligent person ought to plead ignorance of it. If,
however, there should be some who read this article who are not familiar
with the writings of Henry George, the man who has best formulated and
expounded this theory, it is my sincere hope that they will not rest
until they have made themselves acquainted with what he has said. Henry
George, thirty years ago, foresaw and stated all that could be said on
the land question, and to this day his arguments have not been
successfully answered or refuted. Henry George, in my opinion, and in
the opinion of a constantly increasing number of men, is still the
greatest discoverer, sage and statesman that the world has ever seen,
and it is with feelings of satisfaction greater than I can express that,
to-day, in England, the stronghold of Privilege, the truth which he
fought for has been perceived has taken hold on men's consciences, and a
war against a monstrous wrong has begun which, though it may be long,
cannot fail to have but one result, namely, the overthrow of Privilege
in all of its many forms and the triumph of Equal Rights - equal rights
to life, to liberty, to the pursuit of happiness, all of which depend on
men's equal right to the use of the earth.
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