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The Crime of Poverty
Henry George
[An address delivered in the Opera House, Burlington,
Iowa, 1 April 1885]
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I PROPOSE to talk to you to-night of the Crime of Poverty. I cannot,
in a short time, hope to convince you of much; but the thing of things
I should like to show you is that poverty is a crime. I do not mean
that it is a crime to be poor. Murder is a crime; but it is not a
crime to be murdered; and a man who is in poverty, I look upon, not as
a criminal in himself, so much as the victim of a crime for which
others, as well perhaps as himself, are responsible. That poverty is a
curse, the bitterest of curses, we all know. Carlyle was right when he
said that the hell of which Englishmen are most afraid is the hell of
poverty; and this is true, not of Englishmen alone, but of people all
over the civilised world, no matter what their nationality. It is to
escape this hell that we strive and strain and struggle; and work on
oftentimes in blind habit long after the necessity for work is gone.
The curse born of poverty is not confined to the poor alone; it runs
through all classes, even to the very rich. They, too, suffer; they
must suffer; for there cannot be suffering in a community from which
any class can totally escape. The vice, the crime, the ignorance, the
meanness born of poverty, poison, so to speak, the very air which rich
and poor alike must breathe.
Poverty is the mother of ignorance, the breeder of crime. I walked
down one of your streets this morning, and I saw three men going along
with their hands chained together. I knew for certain that those men
were not rich men; and, although I do not know the offence for which
they were carried in chains through your streets, this I think I can
safely say, that, if you trace it up you will find it in some way to
spring from poverty. Nine tenths of human misery, I think you will
find, if you look, to be due to poverty. If a man chooses to be poor,
he commits no crime in being poor, provided his poverty hurts no one
but himself. If a man has others dependent upon him; if there are a
wife and children whom it is his duty to support, then, if he
voluntarily chooses poverty, it is a crime-aye, and I think that, in
most cases, the men who have no one to support but themselves are men
that are shirking their duty. A woman comes into the world for every
man; and for every man who lives a single life, caring only for
himself, there is some woman who is deprived of her natural supporter.
But while a man who chooses to be poor cannot be charged with crime,
it is certainly a crime to force poverty on others. And it seems to me
clear that the great majority of those who suffer from poverty are
poor not from their own particular faults, but because of conditions
imposed by society at large. Therefore I hold that poverty is a
crime-not an individual crime, but a social crime, a crime for which
we all, poor as well as rich, are responsible.
Two or three weeks ago I went one Sunday evening to the church of a
famous Brooklyn preacher. Mr. Sankey was singing and something like a
revival was going on there. The clergyman told some anecdotes
connected with the revival, and recounted some of the reasons why men
failed to become Christians. One case he mentioned struck me. He said
that he had noticed on the outskirts of the congregation, night after
night, a man who listened intently and who gradually moved forward.
One night, the clergyman said, he went to him, saying: "My
brother, are you not ready to become a Christian?" The man said,
no, he was not. He said it, not in a defiant tone, but in a sorrowful
tone; the clergyman asked him why, whether he did not believe in the
truths he had been hearing? Yes, he believed them all. Why, then,
wouldn't he become a Christian? "Well," he said, "I
can't join the church without giving up my business; and it is
necessary for the support of my wife and children. If I give that up,
I don't know how in the world I can get along. I had a hard time
before I found my present business, and I cannot afford to give it up.
Yet I can't become a Christian without giving it up." The
clergyman asked, "are you a rum-seller?" No, he was not a
rum-seller. Well, the clergyman said, he didn't know what in the world
the man could be; it seemed to him that a rum-seller was the only man
who does a business that would prevent his becoming a Christian; and
he finally said: "What is your business?" The man said, "I
sell soap." "Soap!" exclaimed the clergyman, "you
sell soap? How in the world does that prevent your becoming a
Christian?" "Well," the man said, "it is this way;
the soap I sell is one of these patent soaps that are extensively
advertised as enabling you to clean clothes very quickly, as
containing no deleterious compound whatever. Every cake of the soap
that I sell is wrapped in a paper on which is printed a statement that
it contains no injurious chemicals, whereas the truth of the matter is
that it does, and that though it will take the dirt out of clothes
pretty quickly, it will, in a little while, rot them completely. I
have to make my living in this way; and I cannot feel that I can
become a Christian if I sell that soap." The minister went on,
describing how he laboured unsuccessfully with that man, and finally
wound up by saying: "He stuck to his soap and lost his soul."
But, if that man lost his soul, was it his fault alone? Whose fault
is it that social conditions are such that men have to make that
terrible choice between what conscience tells them is right, and the
necessity of earning a living? I hold that it is the fault of society;
that it is the fault of us all. Pestilence is a curse. The man who
would bring cholera to this country, or the man who, having the power
to prevent its coming here, would make no effort to do so, would be
guilty of a crime. Poverty is worse than cholera; poverty kills more
people than pestilence, even in the best of times. Look at the death
statistics of our cities; see where the deaths come quickest; see
where it is that the little children die like flies-it is in the
poorer quarters. And the man who looks with careless eyes upon the
ravages of this pestilence, the man who does not set himself to stay
and eradicate it, he, I say, is guilty of a crime.
If poverty is appointed by the power which is above us all, then it
is no crime; but if poverty is unnecessary, then it is a crime for
which society is responsible and for which society must suffer.
I hold, and I think no one who looks at the facts can fail to see,
that poverty is utterly unnecessary. It is not by the decree of the
Almighty, but it is because of our own injustice, our own selfishness,
our own ignorance, that this scourge, worse than any pestilence,
ravages our civilisation, bringing want and suffering and degradation,
destroying souls as well as bodies. Look over the world, in this
heyday of nineteenth century civilisation. In every civilised country
under the sun you will find men and women whose condition is worse
than that of the savage: men and women and little children with whom
the veriest savage could not afford to exchange. Even in this new city
of yours with virgin soil around you, you have had this winter to
institute a relief society. Your roads have been filled with tramps,
fifteen, I am told, at one time taking shelter in a round-house here.
As here, so everywhere; and poverty is deepest where wealth most
abounds.
What more unnatural than this? There is nothing in nature like this
poverty which to-day curses us. We see rapine in nature; we see one
species destroying another; but as a general thing animals do not feed
on their own kind; and, wherever we see one kind enjoying plenty, all
creatures of that kind share it. No man, I think, ever saw a herd of
buffalo, of which a few were fat and the great majority lean. No man
ever saw a flock of birds, of which two or three were swimming in
grease and the others all skin and bone. Nor in savage life is there
anything like the poverty that festers in our civilisation.
In a rude state of society there are seasons of want, seasons when
people starve; but they are seasons when the earth has refused to
yield her increase, when the rain has not fallen from the heavens, or
when the land has been swept by some foe-not when there is plenty. And
yet the peculiar characteristic of this modern poverty of ours is that
it is deepest where wealth most abounds.
Why, to-day, while over the civilised world there is so much
distress, so much want, what is the cry that goes up? What is the
current explanation of the hard times? Overproduction! There are so
many clothes that men must go ragged, so much coal that in the bitter
winters people have to shiver, such over-filled granaries that people
actually die by starvation! Want due to over-production! Was a greater
absurdity ever uttered? How can there be over-production till all have
enough? It is not over-production; it is unjust distribution.
Poverty necessary! Why, think of the enormous powers that are latent
in the human brain! Think how invention enables us to do with the
power of one man what not long ago could not be done by the power of a
thousand. Think that in England alone the steam machinery in operation
is said to exert a productive force greater than the physical force of
the population of the world, were they all adults. And yet we have
only begun to invent and discover. We have not yet utilised all that
has already been invented and discovered. And look at the powers of
the earth. They have hardly been touched. In every direction as we
look new resources seem to open. Man's ability to produce wealth seems
almost infinite-we can set no bounds to it. Look at the power that is
flowing by your city in the current of the Mississippi that might be
set at work for you. So in every direction energy that we might
utilise goes to waste; resources that we might draw upon are
untouched. Yet men are delving and straining to satisfy mere animal
wants; women are working, working, working their lives away, and too
frequently turning in despair from that hard struggle to cast away all
that makes the charm of woman.
If the animals can reason what must they think of us? Look at one of
those great ocean steamers ploughing her way across the Atlantic,
against wind, against wave, absolutely setting at defiance the utmost
power of the elements. If the gulls that hover over her were thinking
beings could they imagine that the animal that could create such a
structure as that could actually want for enough to eat? Yet, so it
is. How many even of those of us who find life easiest are there who
really live a rational life? Think of it, you who believe that there
is only one life for man-what a fool at the very best is a man to pass
his life in this struggle to merely live? And you who believe, as I
believe, that this is not the last of man, that this is a life that
opens but another life, think how nine tenths, aye, I do not know but
ninety-nine-hundredths of all our vital powers are spent in a mere
effort to get a living; or to heap together that which we cannot by
any possibility take away. Take the life of the average workingman. Is
that the life for which the human brain was intended and the human
heart was made? Look at the factories scattered through our country.
They are little better than penitentiaries.
I read in the New York papers a while ago that the girls at the
Yonkers factories had struck. The papers said that the girls did not
seem to know why they had struck, and intimated that it must be just
for the fun of striking. Then came out the girls' side of the story
and it appeared that they had struck against the rules in force. They
were fined if they spoke to one another, and they were fined still
more heavily if they laughed. There was a heavy fine for being a
minute late. I visited a lady in Philadelphia who had been a forewoman
in various factories, and I asked her, "Is it possible that such
rules are enforced?" She said it was so in Philadelphia. There is
a fine for speaking to your next neighbour, a fine for laughing; and
she told me that the girls in one place where she was employed were
fined ten cents a minute for being late, though many of them had to
come for miles in winter storms. She told me of one poor girl who
really worked hard one week and made $3.50; but the fines against her
were $5.25. That seems ridiculous; it is ridiculous, but it is
pathetic and it is shameful.
But take the cases of those even who are comparatively independent
and well off. Here is a man working hour after hour, day after day,
week after week, in doing one thing over and over again, and for what?
Just to live! He is working ten hours a day in order that he may sleep
eight and may have two or three hours for himself when he is tired out
and all his faculties are exhausted. That is not a reasonable life;
that is not a life for a being possessed of the powers that are in
man, and I think every man must have felt it for himself. I know that
when I first went to my trade I thought to myself that it was
incredible that a man was created to work all day long just to live. I
used to read the Scientific American, and as invention after
invention was heralded in that paper I used to think to myself that
when I became a man it would not be necessary to work so hard. But on
the contrary, the struggle for existence has become more and more
intense. People who want to prove the contrary get up masses of
statistics to show that the condition of the working classes is
improving. Improvement that you have to take a statistical microscope
to discover does not amount to anything. But there is not improvement.
Improvement! Why, according to the last report of the Michigan Bureau
of Labour Statistics, as I read yesterday in a Detroit paper, taking
all the trades, including some of the very high priced ones, where the
wages are from $6 to $7 a day, the average earnings amount to $1.77,
and, taking out waste time, to $1.40. Now, when you consider how a man
can live and bring up a family on $1.40 a day, even in Michigan, I do
not think you will conclude that the condition of the working classes
can have very much improved.
Here is a broad general fact that is asserted by all who have
investigated the question, by such men as Hallam, the historian, and
Professor Thorold Rogers, who has made a study of the history of
prices as they were five centuries ago. When all the productive arts
were in the most primitive state, when the most prolific of our modern
vegetables had not been introduced, when the breeds of cattle were
small and poor, when there were hardly any roads and transportation
was exceedingly difficult, when all manufacturing was done by hand-in
that rude time the condition of the labourers of England was far
better than it is to-day. In those rude times no man need fear want
save when actual famine came, and owing to the difficulties of
transportation the plenty of one district could not relieve the
scarcity of another. Save in such times, no man need fear want.
Pauperism, such as exists in modern times, was absolutely unknown.
Everyone, save the physically disabled, could make a living, and the
poorest lived in rude plenty. But perhaps the most astonishing fact
brought to light by this investigation is that at that time, under
those conditions in those "dark ages," as we call them, the
working day was only eight hours. While with all our modern inventions
and improvements, our working classes have been agitating and
struggling in vain to get the working day reduced to eight hours.
Do these facts show improvement? Why, in the rudest state of society
in the most primitive state of the arts the labour of the natural
bread-winner will suffice to provide a living for himself and for
those who are dependent upon him. Amid all our inventions there are
large bodies of men who cannot do this. What is the most astonishing
thing in our civilisation? Why, the most astonishing thing to those
Sioux chiefs who were recently brought from the Far West and taken
through our manufacturing cities in the East, was not the marvellous
inventions that enabled machinery to act almost as if it had
intellect; it was not the growth of our cities; it was not the speed
with which the railway car whirled along; it was not the telegraph or
the telephone that most astonished them; but the fact that amid this
marvellous development of productive power they found little children
at work. And astonishing that ought to be to us; a most astounding
thing!
Talk about improvement in the condition of the working classes, when
the facts are that a larger and larger proportion of women and
children are forced to toil. Why, I am told that, even here in your
own city, there are children of thirteen and fourteen working in
factories. In Detroit, according to the report of the Michigan Bureau
of Labour Statistics, one half of the children of school age do not go
to school. In New Jersey, the report made to the legislature discloses
an amount of misery and ignorance that is appalling. Children are
growing up there, compelled to monotonous toil when they ought to be
at play, children who do not know how to play; children who have been
so long accustomed to work that they have become used to it; children
growing up in such ignorance that they do not know what country New
Jersey is in, that they never heard of George Washington, that some of
them think Europe is in New York. Such facts are appalling; they mean
that the very foundations of the Republic are being sapped. The
dangerous man is not the man who tries to excite discontent; the
dangerous man is the man who says that all is as it ought to be. Such
a state of things cannot continue; such tendencies as we see at work
here cannot go on without bringing at last an overwhelming crash.
I say that all this poverty and the ignorance that flows from it is
unnecessary; I say that there is no natural reason why we should not
all be rich, in the sense, not of having more than each other, but in
the sense of all having enough to completely satisfy all physical
wants; of all having enough to get such an easy living that we could
develop the better part of humanity. There is no reason why wealth
should not be so abundant, that no one should think of such a thing as
little children at work, or a woman compelled to a toil that nature
never intended her to perform; wealth so abundant that there would be
no cause for that harassing fear that sometimes paralyses even those
who are not considered "the poor", the fear that every man
of us has probably felt, that if sickness should smite him, or if he
should be taken away, those whom he loves better than his life would
become charges upon charity. "Consider the lilies of the field,
how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin." I believe
that in a really Christian community, in a society that honoured not
with the lips but with the act, the doctrines of Jesus, no one would
have occasion to worry about physical needs any more than do the
lilies of the field. There is enough and to spare. The trouble is
that, in this mad struggle, we trample in the mire what has been
provided in sufficiency for us all; trample it in the mire while we
tear and rend each other.
There is a cause for this poverty; and, if you trace it down, you
will find its root in a primary injustice. Look over the world
to-day-poverty everywhere. The cause must be a common one. You cannot
attribute it to the tariff, or to the form of government, or to this
thing or to that in which nations differ; because, as deep poverty is
common to them all the cause that produces it must be a common cause.
What is that common cause? There is one sufficient cause that is
common to all nations; and that is the appropriation as the property
of some of that natural element on which and from which all must live.
Take that fact I have spoken of, that appalling fact that, even now,
it is harder to live than it was in the ages dark and rude five
centuries ago-how do you explain it? There is no difficulty in finding
the cause. Whoever reads the history of England, or the history of any
other civilised nation (but I speak of the history of England because
that is the history with which we are best acquainted) will see the
reason. For century after century a parliament composed of aristocrats
and employers passed laws endeavouring to reduce wages, but in vain.
Men could not be crowded down to wages that gave a mere living because
the bounty of nature was not wholly shut up from them; because some
remains of the recognition of the truth that all men have equal rights
on the earth still existed; because the land of that country, that
which was held in private possession, was only held on a tenure
derived from the nation, and for a rent payable back to the nation.
The church lands supported the expenses of public worship, of the
maintenance of seminaries and the care of the poor; the crown lands
defrayed the expenses of the civil list; and from a third portion of
the lands, those held under the military tenures, the army was
provided for. There was no national debt in England at that time. They
carried on wars for hundreds of years, but at the charge of the
landowners. And more important still, there remained everywhere, and
you can see in every old English town their traces to this day, the
common lands to which any of the neighbourhood was free. It was as
those lands were enclosed; it was as the commons were gradually
monopolised, as the church lands were made the prey of greedy
courtiers, as the crown lands were given away as absolute property to
the favourites of the king, as the military tenants shirked their
rents and laid the expenses they had agreed to defray, upon the
nation, in taxation that bore upon industry and upon thrift-it was
then that poverty began to deepen, and the tramp appeared in England;
just as to-day he is appearing in our new States.
Now, think of it-is not land monopolisation a sufficient reason for
poverty? What is man? In the first place, he is an animal, a land
animal who cannot live without land. All that man produces comes from
land; all productive labour, in the final analysis, consists in
working up land; or materials drawn from land, into such forms as fit
them for the satisfaction of human wants and desires. Why, man's very
body is drawn from the land. Children of the soil, we come from the
land, and to the land we must return. Take away from man all that
belongs to the land, and what have you but a disembodied spirit?
Therefore he who holds the land on which and from which another man
must live, is that man's master; and the man is his slave. The man who
holds the land on which I must live can command me to life or to death
just as absolutely as though I were his chatter. Talk about abolishing
slavery-we have not abolished slavery; we have only abolished one
rude form of it, chattel slavery. There is a deeper and a more
insidious form, a more cursed form yet before us to abolish, in this
industrial slavery that makes a man a virtual slave, while taunting
him and mocking him with the name of freedom. Poverty! want! they will
sting as much as the lash. Slavery! God knows there are horrors enough
in slavery; but there are deeper horrors in our civilised society
to-day. Bad as chattel slavery was, it did not drive slave mothers to
kill their children, yet you may read in official reports that the
system of child insurance which has taken root so strongly in England,
and which is now spreading over our Eastern States, has perceptibly
and largely increased the rate of child mortality!-What does that
mean?
Robinson Crusoe, as you know, when he rescued Friday from the
cannibals, made him his slave. Friday had to serve Crusoe. But,
supposing Crusoe had said, "O man and brother, I am very glad to
see you, and I welcome you to this island, and you shall be a free and
independent citizen, with just as much to say as I have except that
this island is mine, and of course, as I can do as I please with my
own property, you must not use it save upon my terms." Friday
would have been just as much Crusoe's slave as though he had called
him one. Friday was not a fish, he could not swim off through the sea;
he was not a bird, and could not fly off through the air; if he lived
at all, he had to live on that island. And if that island was
Crusoe's, Crusoe was his master through life to death.
A friend of mine, who believes as I do upon this question was talking
a while ago with another friend of mine who is a greenbacker, but who
had not paid much attention to the land question. Our greenback friend
said, "Yes, yes, the land question is an important question; oh,
I admit the land question is a very important question; but then there
are other important questions. There is this question and that
question, and the other question; and there is the money question.
The money question is a very important question; it is a more
important question than the land question. You give me all the money,
and you can take all the land." My friend said, "Well,
suppose you had all the money in the world and I had all the land in
the world. What would you do if I were to give you notice to quit?"
Do you know that I do not think that the average man realises what
land is? I know a little girl who has been going to school for some
time, studying geography, and all that sort of thing; and one day she
said to me: "Here is something about the surface of the earth. I
wonder what the surface of the earth looks like?" "Well,"
I said, "look out into the yard there. That is the surface of the
earth." She said, "That the surface of the earth? Our yard
the surface of the earth? Why, I never thought of it!" That is
very much the case not only with grown men, but with such wise beings
as newspaper editors. They seem to think, when you talk of land, that
you always refer to farms; to think that the land question is a
question that relates entirely to farmers, as though land had no other
use than growing crops. Now, I should like to know how a man could
even edit a newspaper without having the use of some land. He might
swing himself by straps and go up in a balloon, but he could not even
then get along without land. What supports the balloon in the air?
Land; the surface of the earth. Let the earth drop, and what would
become of the balloon? The air that supports the balloon is supported
in turn by land. So it is with everything else men can do.
Whether a man is working away three thousand feet under the surface
of the earth or whether he is working up in the top of one of those
immense buildings that they have in New York; whether he is ploughing
the soil or sailing across the ocean, he is still using land. Land!
Why, in owning a piece of ground, what do you own ? The lawyers will
tell you that you own from the centre of the earth right up to heaven;
and, so far as all human purposes go, you do. In New York they are
building houses thirteen and fourteen stories high. What are men,
living in those upper stories, paying for? There is a friend of mine
who has an office in one of them, and he estimates that he pays by the
cubic foot for air. Well, the man who owns the surface of the land has
the renting of the air up there, and would have if the buildings were
carried up for miles.
This land question is the bottom question. Man is a land animal.
Suppose you want to build a house; can you build it without a place to
put it? What is it built of? Stone, or mortar, or wood, or iron-they
all come from the earth. Think of any article of wealth you choose,
any of those things which men struggle for, where do they come from?
From the land. It is the bottom question. The land question is simply
the labour question; and when some men own that element from which all
wealth must be drawn, and upon which all must live, then they have the
power of living without work, and, therefore, those who do work get
less of the products of work. Did you ever think of the utter
absurdity and strangeness of the fact that, all over the civilised
world, the working classes are the poor classes? Go into any city in
the world, and get into a cab and ask the man to drive you where the
working people live. He won't take you to where the fine houses are.
He will take you, on the contrary, into the squalid quarters, the
poorer quarters. Did you ever think how curious that is? Think for a
moment how it would strike a rational being who had never been on the
earth before, if such an intelligence could come down, and you were to
explain to him how we live on earth, how houses and food and clothing,
and all the many things we need were all produced by work, would he
not think that the working people would be the people who lived in the
finest houses and had most of everything that work produces? Yet,
whether you took him to London or Paris or New York, or even to
Burlington, he would find that those called the working people were
the people who live in the poorest houses. All this is strange-just
think of it.
We naturally despise poverty; and it is reasonable that we should. I
do not say-I distinctly repudiate it-that the people who are poor are
poor always from their own fault, or even in most cases; but it ought
to be so. If any good man or woman could create a world, it would be a
sort of a world in which no one would be poor unless he was lazy or
vicious. But that is just precisely the kind of a world this is; that
is just precisely the kind of a world the Creator has made. Nature
gives to labour, and to labour alone; there must be human work before
any article of wealth can be produced; and in the natural state of
things the man who toiled honestly and well would be the rich man, and
he who did not work would be poor. We have so reversed the order of
nature that we are accustomed to think of the workingman as a poor
man. And if you trace it out I believe you will see that the primary
cause of this is that we compel those who work to pay others for
permission to do so. You may buy a coat, a horse, a house; there you
are paying the seller for labour exerted, for something that he has
produced, or that he has got from the man who did produce it; but when
you pay a man for land, what are you paying him for? You are paying
for something that no man has produced; you pay him for something that
was here before man was, or for a value that was created, not by him
individually, but by the community of which you are a part.
What is the reason that the land here, where we stand tonight, is
worth more than it was twenty-five years ago? What is the reason that
land in the centre of New York, that once could be bought by the mile
for a jug of whiskey, is now worth so much that, though you were to
cover it with gold, you would not have its value? Is it not because of
the increase of population? Take away that population, and where would
the value of the land be? Look at it in any way you please. We talk
about over-production. How can there be such a thing as
over-production while people want? All these things that are said to
be over-produced are desired by many people. Why do they not get them?
They do not get them because they have not the means to buy them; not
that they do not want them. Why have not they the means to buy them?
They earn too little. When the great masses of men have to work for an
average of $1.40 a day, it is no wonder that great quantities of
goods cannot be sold. 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? Adam
had no difficulty in finding employment; neither had Robinson Crusoe;
the finding of employment was the last thing that troubled them. If
men cannot find an employer, why cannot they employ themselves? Simply
because they are shut out from the element on which human labour 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 paving some other human
creature for the privilege. I do not mean to say that even after you
had set right this fundamental injustice, there would not be many
things to do; but this I do mean to say, that our treatment of land
lies at the bottom of all social questions. This I do mean to say,
that, do what you please, reform as you may, you never can get rid of
wide-spread poverty so long as the element on which and from which all
men must live is made the private property of some men. It is utterly
impossible.
Reform government-get taxes down to the minimum-build railroads;
institute co-operative stores; divide profits, if you choose, between
employers and employed-and what will be the result? The result will be
that the land will increase in value-that will be the result-that and
nothing else. Experience shows this. Do not all improvements simply
increase the value of land-the price that some must pay others for the
privilege of living? Consider the matter, I say it with all reverence,
and I merely say it because I wish to impress a truth upon your
minds-it is utterly impossible, so long as His laws are what they are,
that God himself could relieve poverty-utterly impossible. Think of it
and you will see. Men pray to the Almighty to relieve poverty. But
poverty comes not from God's laws-it is blasphemy of the worst kind to
say that; it comes from man's injustice to his fellows. Supposing the
Almighty were to hear the prayer, how could He carry out the request
so long as His laws are what they are? Consider-the Almighty gives us
nothing of the things that constitute wealth; He merely gives us the
raw material, which must be utilised by man to produce wealth. Does He
not give us enough of that now? How could He relieve poverty even if
He were to give us more? Supposing in answer to these prayers He were
to increase the power of the sun; or the virtue of the soil? Supposing
He were to make plants more prolific, or animals to produce after
their kind more abundantly? Who would get the benefit of it? Take a
country where land is completely monopolised, as it is in most of the
civilised countries-who would get the benefit of it? Simply the
landowners. And even if God in answer to prayer were to send down out
of the heavens those things that men require, who would get the
benefit? In the Old Testament we are told that when the Israelites
journeyed through the desert, they were hungered, and that God sent
manna down out of the heavens. There was enough for all of them, and
they all took it and were relieved. But supposing that desert had been
held as private property, as the soil of Great Britain is held, as the
soil even of our new States is being held; suppose that one of the
Israelites had a square mile, and another one had twenty square miles,
and another one had a hundred square miles, and the great majority of
the Israelites did not have enough to set the soles of their feet
upon, which they could call their own-what would become of the manna?
What good would it have done to the majority? Not a whit. Though God
had sent down manna enough for all, that manna would have been the
property of the landholders; they would have employed some of she
others perhaps, to gather it up into heaps for them, and would have
sold it to their hungry brethren. Consider it; this purchase and sale
of manna might have gone on until the majority of Israelites had given
all they had, even to the clothes off their backs. What then? Then
they would not have had anything left to buy manna with, and the
consequences would have been that while they went hungry the manna
would have lain in great heaps, and the landowners would have been
complaining of the over-production of manna. There would have been a
great harvest of manna and hungry people, just precisely the
phenomenon that we see to-day.
I cannot go over all the points I would like to try, but I wish to
call your attention to the utter absurdity of private property in
land! Why, consider it, the idea of a man's selling the earth-the
earth, our common mother. A man selling that which no man produced-a
man passing title from one generation to another. Why, it is the most
absurd thing in the world. Why, did you ever think of it? What right
has a dead man to land? For whom was this earth created? It was
created for the living, certainly, not for the dead. Well, now we
treat it as though it was created for the dead. Where do our land
titles come from? They come from men who for the most part are past
and gone.
Here in this new country you get a little nearer the original source;
but go to the Eastern States and go back over the Atlantic. There you
may clearly see the power that comes from landownership. As I say, the
man that owns the land is the master of those who must live on it.
Here is a modern instance: you who are familiar with the history of
the Scottish Church know that in the forties there was a disruption in
the church. You who have read Hugh Miller's work on "The Cruise
of the Betsey" know something about it; how a great body, led by
Dr. Chalmers, came out from the Established Church and said they would
set up a Free Church. In the Established Church were a great many of
the landowners. Some of them, like the Duke of Buccleugh, owning miles
and miles of land on which no common Scotsman had a right to put his
foot, save by the Duke of Buccleugh's permission. These landowners
refused not only to allow these Free Churchmen to have ground upon
which to erect a church, but they would not let them stand on their
land and worship God. You who have read "The Cruise of the Betsey"
know that it is the story of a clergyman who was obliged to make his
home in a boat on that wild sea because he was not allowed to have
land enough to live on. In many places the people had to take the
sacrament with the tide coming to their knees-many a man lost his life
worshipping on the roads in rain and snow. They were not permitted to
go on Mr. Landlord's land and worship God, and had to take to the
roads. The Duke of Buccleugh stood out for seven years compelling
people to worship in the roads, until finally relenting a little, he
allowed them to worship God in a gravel pit; whereupon they passed a
resolution of thanks to His Grace.
But that is not what I wanted to tell you. The thing that struck me
was this significant fact: As soon as the disruption occurred, the
Free Church, composed of a great many able men, at once sent a
delegation to the landlords to ask permission for Scotsmen to worship
God in Scotland and in their own way. This delegation set out for
London-they had to go to London, England, to get permission for
Scotsmen to worship God in Scotland, and in their own native home! But
that is not the most absurd thing. In one place where they were
refused land upon which to stand and worship God, the late landowner
had died and his estate was in the hands of the trustees, and the
answer of the trustees was, that so far as they were concerned they
would exceedingly like to allow them to have a place to put up a
church to worship God, but they could not conscientiously do it
because they knew that such a course would be very displeasing to the
late Mr. Monaltie! Now this dead man had gone to heaven, let us hope;
at any rate he had gone away from this world, but lest it might
displease him men yet living could not worship God. Is it possible for
absurdity to go any further? You may say that those Scotch people are
very absurd people, but they are not a whit more so than we are. I
read only a little while ago of some Long Island fishermen who had
been paying as rent for the privilege of fishing there, a certain part
of the catch. They paid it because they believed that James II, a dead
man centuries ago, a man who never put his foot in America, a king who
was kicked off the English throne, had said they had to pay it, and
they got up a committee, went to the county town and searched the
records. They could not find anything in the records to show that
James II had ever ordered that they should give any of their fish to
anybody, and so they refused to pay any longer. But if they had found
that James II had really said they should they would have gone on
paying. Can anything be more absurd?
There is a square in New York-Stuyvesant Square that is locked up at
six o'clock every evening, even on the long summer evenings. Why is it
locked up? Why are the children not allowed to play there? Why because
old Mr. Stuyvesant, dead and gone I don't know how many years ago, so
willed it. Now can anything be more absurd?* *)After a popular
agitation, the park authorities since decided to have the gates open
later than six o'clock.Yet that is not any more absurd than our land
titles. From whom do they come? Dead man after dead man. Suppose you
get on the cars here going to Council Bluffs or Chicago. You find a
passenger with his baggage strewn over the seats. You say: "Will
you give me a seat, if you please, sir?" He replies: "No; I
bought this seat." "Bought this seat? From whom did you buy
it?" I bought it from the man who got out at the last station,"
That is the way we manage this earth of ours. Is it not a self-evident
truth, as Thomas Jefferson said, that "the land belongs in
usufruct to the living," and that they who have died have left
it, and have no power to say how it shall be disposed of? Title to
land! Where can a man get any title which makes the earth his
property? There is a sacred right to property-sacred because ordained
by the laws of nature, that is to say, by the laws of God, and
necessary to social order and civilisation. That is the right of
property in things produced by labour; it rests on the right of a man
to himself. That which a man produces, that is his against all the
world, to give or to keep, to lend, to sell or to bequeath; but how
can he get such a right to land when it was here before he came?
Individual claims to land rest only on appropriation. I read in a
recent number of the "Nineteenth Century," possibly some of
you may have read it, an article by an ex-prime minister of Australia
in which there was a little story that attracted my attention. It was
of a man named Galahard, who in the early days got up to the top of a
high hill in one of the finest parts of western Australia. He got up
there, looked all around, and made this proclamation: "All the
land that is in my sight from the top of this hill I claim for myself;
and all the land that is out of sight I claim for my son John."
That story is of universal application. Land titles everywhere come
from just such appropriations. Now, under certain circumstances,
appropriation can give a right. You invite a company of gentlemen to
dinner and you say to them: "Be seated, gentlemen," and I
get into this chair. Well, that seat for the time being is mine by the
right of appropriation. It would be very ungentlemanly, it would be
very wrong for any one of the other guests to come up and say: "Get
out of that chair; I want to sit there I" But that right of
possession, which is good so far as the chair is concerned, for the
time, does not give me a right to appropriate all there is on the
table before me. Grant that a man has a right to appropriate such
natural elements as he can use, has he any right to appropriate more
than he can use? Has a guest in such a case as I have supposed a right
to appropriate more than he needs and make other people stand up? That
is what is done. Why, look all over this country-look at this town or
any other town.
If men only took what they wanted to use we should all have enough;
but they take what they do not want to use at all. Here are a lot of
Englishmen coming over here and getting titles to our land in vast
tracts; what do they want with our land? They do not want it at all;
it is not the land they want; they have no use for American land. What
they want is the income that they know they can in a little while get
from it. Where does that income come from? It comes from labour, from
the labour of American citizens. What we are selling to these people
is our children, not land. Poverty! Can there be any doubt of its
cause? Go, into the old countries-go into western Ireland, into the
highlands of Scotland-these are purely primitive communities. There
you will find people as poor as poor can be-living year after year on
oatmeal or on potatoes, and often going hungry. I could tell you many
a pathetic story.
Speaking to a Scottish physician who was telling me how this diet was
inducing among these people a disease similar to that which from the
same cause is ravaging Italy (the Pellagra), I said to him: "There
is plenty of fish; why don't they catch fish? There is plenty of game;
I know the laws are against it, but cannot they take it on the sly?"
"That," he said, "never enters their heads. Why, if a
man was even suspected of having a taste for trout or grouse he would
have to leave at once." There is no difficulty in discovering
what makes those people poor. They have no right to anything that
nature gives them. All they can make above a living they must pay to
the landlord. They not only have to pay for the land that they use,
but they have to pay for the seaweed that comes ashore and for the
turf they dig from the bogs. They dare not improve, for any
improvements they make are made an excuse for putting up the rent.
These people who work hard live in hovels, and the landlords, who do
not work at all-oh! they live in luxury in London or Paris. If they
have hunting boxes there, why they are magnificent castles as compared
with the hovels in which the men live who do the work. Is there any
question as to the cause of poverty there? Now go into the cities and
what do you see! Why, you see even a lower depth of poverty; aye, if I
would point out the worst of the evils of land monopoly I would not
take you to Connemara; I would not take you to Skye or Kintire-I would
take you to Dublin or Glasgow or London.
There is something worse than physical deprivation, something worse
than starvation; and that is the degradation of the mind, the death of
the soul. That is what you will find in those cities. Now, what is the
cause of that? Why, it is plainly to be seen; the people driven off
the land in the country are driven into the slums of the cities. For
every man that is driven off the land the demand for the produce of
the workmen of the cities is lessened; and the man himself with his
wife and children, is forced among those workmen to compete upon any
terms for a bare living and force wages down. Get work he must or
starve-get work he must or do that which those people, so long as they
maintain their manly feelings, dread more than death, go to the
alms-houses. That is the reason, here as in Great Britain, that the
cities are overcrowded.
Open the land that is locked up, that is held by dogs in the manger,
who will not use it themselves and will not allow anybody else to use
it, and you would see no more of tramps and hear no more of
over-production. The utter absurdity of this thing of private property
in land! I defy any one to show me any good from it, look where you
please. Go out in the new lands, where my attention was first called
to it, or go to the heart of the capital of the world-London.
Everywhere, when your eyes are once opened, you will see its
inequality and you will see its absurdity. You do not have to go
farther than Burlington. You have here a most beautiful site for a
city, but the city itself as compared with what it might be is a
miserable, straggling town. A gentleman showed me to-day a big hole
alongside one of your streets. The place has been filled up all around
it and this hole is left. It is neither pretty nor useful. Why does
that hole stay there? Well, it stays there because somebody claims it
as his private property. There is a man, this gentleman told me, who
wished to grade another lot and wanted somewhere to put the dirt he
took off it, and he offered to buy this hole so that he might fill it
up. Now it would have been a good thing for Burlington to have it
filled up, a good thing for you all-your town would look better, and
you yourself would be in no danger of tumbling into it some dark
night. Why, my friend pointed out to me another similar hole in which
water had collected and told me that two children had been drowned
there. And he likewise told me that a drunken man some years ago had
fallen into such a hole and had brought suit against the city which
cost you taxpayers some $11,000. Clearly it is to the interest of you
all to have that particular hole I am talking of filled up. The man
who wanted to fill it up offered the hole owner $300. But the hole
owner refused the offer and declared that he would hold out until he
could get $1000; and in the meanwhile that unsightly and dangerous
hole must remain.
This is but an illustration of private property in land. You may see
the same thing all over this country. See how injuriously in the
agricultural districts this thing of private property in land afflects
the roads and the distances between the people. A man does not take
what land he wants, what he can use, but he takes all he can get, and
the consequence is that his next neighbour has to go further along,
people are separated from each other further than they ought to be, to
the increased difficulty of production, to the loss of neighbourhood
and companionship. They have more roads to maintain than they can
decently maintain; they must do more work to get the same result, and
life is in every way harder and drearier. When you come to the cities
it is just the other way. In the country the people are too much
scattered; in the great cities they are too crowded. Go to a city like
New York and there they are jammed together like sardines in a box,
living family upon family, one above the other. It is an unnatural and
unwholesome life.
How can you have anything like a home in a tenement room, or two or
three rooms? How can children be brought up healthily with no place to
play? Two or three weeks ago I read of a New York judge who fined two
little boys five dollars for playing hop-scotch on the street-where
else could they play? Private property in land had robbed them of all
place to play. Even a temperance man, who had investigated the
subject, said that in his opinion the gin palaces of London were a
positive good in this, that they enabled the people whose abodes were
dark and squalid rooms to see a little brightness and thus prevent
them from going wholly mad.
What is the reason for this overcrowding of cities? There is no
natural reason. Take New York, one half its area is not built upon.
Why, then, must people crowd together as they do there? Simply because
of private ownership of land. There is plenty of room to build houses
and plenty, of people who want to build houses, but before anybody can
build a house a blackmail price must be paid to some dog in the
manger. It costs in many cases more to get vacant ground upon which to
build a house than it does to build the house. And then what happens
to the man who pays this blackmail and builds a house? Down comes the
tax-gatherer and fines him for building the house. It is so all over
the United States-the men who improve, the men who turn the prairie
into farms and the desert into gardens, the men who beautify your
cities, are taxed and fined for having done these things.
Now, nothing is clearer than that the people of New York want more
houses; and I think that even here in Burlington you could get along
with more houses. Why, then, should you fine a man who builds one?
Look all over this country-the bulk of the taxation rests upon the
improver; the man who puts up a building, or establishes a factory, or
cultivates a farm he is taxed for it; and not merely taxed for it, but
I think in nine cases out of ten the land which he uses, the bare
land, is taxed more than the adjoining lot or the adjoining 160 acres
that some speculator is holding as a mere dog in the manger, not using
it himself and not allowing anybody else to use it.
I am talking too long; but let me in a few words point out the way of
getting rid of land monopoly, securing the right of all to the
elements which are necessary for life. We could not divide the land.
In a rude state of society, as among the ancient Hebrews. giving each
family its lot and making it inalienable we might secure something
like equality. But in a complex civilisation that will not suffice. It
is not, however, necessary to divide up the land. All that is
necessary is to divide up the income that comes from the land. In that
way we can secure absolute equality; nor could the adoption of this
principle involve any rude shock or violent change. It can be brought
about gradually and easily by abolishing taxes that now rest upon
capital, labour and improvements, and raising all our public revenues
by the taxation of land values; and the longer you think of it the
clearer you will see that in every possible way will it he a benefit.
Now, supposing we should abolish all other taxes direct and indirect,
substituting for them a tax upon land values, what would be the
effect? In the first place it would be to kill speculative values. It
would be to remove from the newer parts of the country the bulk of the
taxation and put it on the richer parts. It would be to exempt the
pioneer from taxation and make the larger cities pay more of it. It
would be to relieve energy and enterprise, capital and labour, from
all those burdens that now bear upon them. What a start that would
give to production!
In the second place we could, from the value of the land, not merely
pay all the present expenses of the government, but we could do
infinitely more. In the city of San Francisco James Lick left a few
blocks of ground to be used for public purposes there, and the rent
amounts to so much, that out of it will be built the largest telescope
in the world, large public baths and other public buildings, and
various costly works. If, instead of these few blocks, the whole value
of the land upon which the city is built had accrued to San Francisco
what could she not do? So in this little town, where land values are
very low as compared with such cities as Chicago and San Francisco,
you could do many things for mutual benefit and public improvement did
you appropriate to public purposes the land values that now go to
individuals. You could have a great free library; you could have an
art gallery; you could get yourselves a public park, a magnificent
public park, too. You have here one of the finest natural sites for a
beautiful town I know of, and I have travelled much. You might make on
this site a city that it would be a pleasure to live in. You will not
as you go now-oh, no! Why, the very fact that you have a magnificent
view here will cause somebody to hold on all the more tightly to the
land that commands this view and charge higher prices for it.
The State of New York wants to buy a strip of land so as to enable
the people to see Niagara, but what a price she must pay for it! Look
at all the great cities; in Philadelphia, for instance, in order to
build their great city hall they had to block up the only two wide
streets they had in the city. Everywhere you go you may see how
private property in land prevents public as well as private
improvement. But I have not time to enter into further details. I can
only ask you to think upon this thing, and the more you will see its
desirability. As an English friend of mine puts it: "No taxes and
a pension for everybody;" and why should it not be? To take land
values for public purposes is not really to impose a tax, but to take
for public purposes a value created by the community. And out of the
fund which would thus accrue from the common property, we might,
without degradation to anybody, provide enough to actually secure from
want all who were deprived of their natural protectors or met with
accident, or any man who should grow so old that he could not work.
All prating that is heard from some quarters about its hurting the
common people to give them what they do not work for is humbug. The
truth is, that anything that injures self-respect, degrades, does
harm; but if you give it as a right, as something to which every
citizen is entitled to, it does not degrade. Charity schools do
degrade children that are sent to them, but public schools do not. But
all such benefits as these, while great, would be incidental. The
great thing would be that the reform I propose would tend to open
opportunities to labour and enable men to provide employment for
themselves. That is the great advantage. We should gain the enormous
productive power that is going to waste all over the country, the
power of idle hands that would gladly be at work. And that removed,
then you would see wages begin to mount. It is not that everyone would
turn farmer, or everyone would build himself a house if he had an
opportunity for doing so, but so many could and would, as to relieve
the pressure on the labour market and provide employment for all
others. And as wages mounted to the higher levels, then you would see
the productive power increased. The country where wages are high is
the country of greatest productive powers. Where wages are highest,
there will invention be most active; there will labour be most
intelligent; there will be the greatest yield for the expenditure of
exertion. The more you think of it the more clearly you will see that
what I say is true. I cannot hope to convince you in an hour or two,
but I shall be content if I shall put you upon inquiry.
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