Jefferson is a pole star among political philosophers because he
based his politics on the eternal, self-evident, fundamental truths
that all men are created free and equal and that they are endowed by
their Creator with certain inherent and unalienable rights, among
which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. How are the
rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness primarily to be
exercised? Not in the political field, but in the underlying social
field. How shall a man get an independent living precedes how shall he
participate in general government. He cannot exercise, or fully
exercise, his political faculties until, without let or hindrance, he
can get sustenance.
Hence Jefferson's political axiom involves as a Prerequisite a
social or economic axiom, without observance of which political
institutions can be only as a house built upon the sand. This economic
axiom is that men have equal rights to natural opportunities, to land.
O, land mankind must have its habitation and from it must draw
subsistence. Nowhere else, from no other source, can it live.
Therefore, the rights of life, liberty and pursuit of happiness carry
with them the inherent, unalienable, equal right of all to land.
If this economic principle is not in the general mind associated
with Jefferson's doctrine of democracy it is only because he did not
give it prominence. When there was seeming need he set it forth
explicitly and clearly, but this was rarely. Was there not in his day
unappropriated land in superabundance? Why inject into the domain of
war issues, into the intricate and difficult business of the founding
of a nation and the construction of a radically new form of
government, the abstract question of equal rights to land, when as a
practical fact plenty could be had by anyone for the mere taking!
In Jefferson's day a small population lay scattered along the
Atlantic seaboard. The great virgin, unappropriated, and for the most
part unexplored, continent, three thousand miles broad, stretched
west, open to the pioneer and the settler. Of land there appeared
enough for scores of generations to come. The nation was agricultural,
and whoever desired it could have a farm by moving into the trackless
wilderness and making a clearing, which more and more were doing,
thereby showing their freedom from dependence upon the established
centers. They faced the sunset and moved out along the Ohio and the
Mississippi.
Although a man of great and varied learning and polished
culture, Jefferson was in spirit a frontiersman. He had a strong
affinity for the rugged, independent pioneer and settler. He was a
graduate of the oldest, and, at that time, richest institution of
learning in America, the College of William and Mary, near
Williamsburg, Virginia. By inheritance he was for that day a
well-to-do man. By this and marriage and social connections he
belonged to the wealthy planter class, which, relieved from toil for
subsistence, could yield itself to the ease, graces and refinements of
life. Jefferson's alert, powerful, acquisitive, analytical mind found
this a most suitable soil for its development.
An environment so stimulating to intellectual growth might also
be expected to take a subtile, invisible hold on the mind and make of
its beneficiary its votary and creature. But while fully conscious of
the charms of its warm and tranquil atmosphere, Jefferson was early
aware that the wealthy planter class was the bulwark in Virginia and
the South of the British Crown tyranny and the buttress there of the
Established Church, which falsely gave the sanction of religion to
such tyranny and preached submission to the rulers God had raised over
the people.
The resistance that early germinated in the free, bold mind
against the usurpations and abuses of the British Crown thus came at
length to include as a whole the planter class and their established
priesthood. As Moses, adopted Prince in the house of Pharaoh, next in
blood to Royalty, struck dead the Egyptian taskmaster, and, turning
his back upon pride and circumstance of power, led forth the Hebrew
slaves into the desert toward the Promised Land, so Jefferson, moved
by anger and scorn against the planter class for its fellowship and
partnership in the tyranny of the Crown, threw off its allurements, so
congenial to his tastes and habits, and allied himself absolutely,
unreservedly, actively, permanently with the wronged masses. In the
struggle in that agricultural community between the "planters,"
or large landowners, and the "settlers," or small
landowners, Jefferson's heart was always with the latter.
It was the old fight in a new form -- the antagonism between the
silk stockings and the wool hats, between the red heels and the
sabots. Jefferson, by fortune and culture, of the silk stockings and
red heels, consciously, deliberately, with definite and fixed purpose,
sided with the wool hats and sabots. It was in some degree as if a
French seigneur under the ancient regime had rejected place and power
to preach the destruction of privilege on the one side and the
upraising of the trampled and despised on the other.
But this comparison of Jefferson with the French noble can be
only in degree, and in slight degree. The social desparity, so extreme
in the old world, was but faintly marked in the new. The rich men of
America were of but moderate means beside the rich of Europe, while
the poor were greatly better off here than there. "From Savannah
[Georgia] to Portsmouth [Maine]," said Jefferson in his "Notes
on Virginia," "you will seldom meet a beggar. In the large
towns, indeed, they sometimes present themselves. These are usually
foreigners who have never obtained a settlement in any parish. I never
yet saw a native American begging in the streets and highways. A
subsistence is easily gained here." To Claviere he wrote: "I
attended the bar of the Supreme Court of Virginia ten years as a
student and practitioner. There never was during that time a trial for
robbery on the highroad, nor do I remember ever to have heard of one
in that or any other of the States, except in the cities of New York
and Philadelphia immediately after the departure of the British army.
Some deserters from that army infested those cities for awhile."
In the "Notes on Virginia," Jefferson compared social
conditions. "So desirous are the poor of Europe to get to
America, where they may better their condition," he said, "that,
being unable to pay their passage, they will agree to serve two or
three years on their arrival there, rather than not go. During that
time they are better fed, better clothed, and have lighter labor than
while in Europe. Continuing to work for hire, a few years longer, they
buy a farm, marry and enjoy all the sweets of a domestic society of
their own."
The fact that Jefferson always kept clearly in mind was that "a
subsistence is easily gained here." He explained this by the
first principles of political economy, namely, that men had easy
access to natural opportunities. To John Jay he wrote: "We have
now lands enough to employ an infinite number of people in their
cultivation. Cultivators of the earth are the most valuable citizens.
They are the most vigorous, the most independent, the most virtuous,
and they are tied to their country and wedded to its liberty by the
most lasting bonds." In the "Notes"' he said: "In
Europe the lands are either cultivated or locked up against the
cultivator, Manufacture must, therefore, be resorted to, of necessity,
not of choice, to support the surplus of their people. But we have an
immensity of land courting the industry of husbandmen. men. ... Those
who labor the earth are the chosen people of God if ever He had a
chosen people, whose breasts He has made his peculiar deposit for
substantial and genuine virtue. It is the focus in which he keeps
alive that sacred fire, which otherwise might escape from the face of
the earth. Corruption of morals in the mass of cultivators is a
phenomenon of which no age nor nation has furnished an example."
And because manufacturing called for condensed population and
seemingly more or less dependence for employment, and since "dependence
begets subservience and venality, suffocates the germ of virtue and
prepares fit tools for the designs of ambition," manufacturing
was to be avoided. But as he explained later to J. Lithgow, concerning
a revised edition of the "Notes," he did not intend an
indiscriminate denunciation of manufacturing but had in mind the
possible future repetition in this country of the conditions he beheld
in Europe, where "the manufactures of the great cities ... have
begotten a depravity of morals, a dependence and corruption, which
renders them an undesirable accession to a country whose morals are
sound." "But," continued the philosopher, "as yet
our manufactures are as much at their ease, independent and moral, as
our agricultural habits, and they will continue so as long as there
are vacant lands for them to resort to; because whenever it shall be
attempted by the other classes to reduce them to the minimum of
subsistence they will quit their trade and go to laboring the earth."
And to James Madison, his closest friend, he wrote from Paris in this
same line: "I think our governments [Federal and State] will
remain virtuous for many centuries -- as long as they are chiefly
agricultural; and this will be as long as there are vacant
[unappropriated] lands in any part of America. When they [our people]
get piled upon one another in large cities, as in Europe, they will
become corrupt, as in Europe."
These were not accidental remarks or passing views of the great
American. They were the conclusions of observation and thought --
thought that was extraordinarily far reaching in its consequences.
Writing to Madison from Paris, where, he said, they were immersed in a
course of reflection "on elementary principles of society,"
he remarked that he was led to a consideration of the question "Whether
one generation of men has a right to bind another," -- a question
"that seems never to have been started either on this or on our
side of the water." "I set out on this ground which I
suppose to be self-evident," observes Jefferson, "that the
earth belongs in usufruct to the living, that the dead have neither
powers nor rights over it. ...On similar ground it may be proved that
no society can make a perpetual constitution or even a perpetual law.
Every constitution, then, and every law, naturally expires at the end
of nineteen years. If it be enforced longer, it is an act of force and
not of right. ...This principle that the earth belongs to the living
and not to the dead is of very extensive application and consequences
in every 'country, and most especially in France. It enters into the
resolution of the questions: Whether the nation may change the descent
of land holden in tail? Whether they may change the appropriation of
lands given anciently to the church, colleges, orders of chivalry and
otherwise in perpetuity? Whether they may abolish the charges and
privileges attached on lands, including the whole catalogue
ecclesiastical and feudal! It goes to hereditary offices, authorities
and jurisdictions; to hereditary orders, distinctions and
appellations; to perpetual monopolies in commerce, the arts and
sciences; and a long train of et ceteras; and it renders the question
of reimbursement a question of generosity and not of right."
This argues that one generation has no right to make land laws,
or any other kind of laws, for another generation. Far in advance of
general thought as this was, Jefferson did not stop here, but pointed
out the fundamental right to land of individuals composing any
generation. This he wrote, also from Paris, to the father of Madison,
the Rev. James Madison: "The property of this country [France] is
absolutely concentrated in a very few hands, having revenues of from
half a million guineas a year downward. These employ the flower of the
country as servants, some of them having as many as two hundred
domestics, not laboring. They employ also a great number of
manufacturers and tradesmen, and lastly the class of laboring
husbandmen. But after all there comes the most numerous of all the
classes, that is, the poor who cannot find work. I asked myself what
could be the reason that so many should be permitted to beg who are
willing to work, in a country where there is a very considerable
proportion of uncultivated land? These lands are undisturbed only for
the sake of game. ... Whenever there is in any country uncultivated
lands and unemployed poor it is clear that the laws of property have
been so far extended as to violate natural rights. The earth is given
as a common stock for man to labor and live on. If for the
encouragement of industry we allow it to be appropriated we must take
care that other employment be provided to those excluded from the
appropriation. If we do not, the fundamental right to labor the earth
returns to the unemployed."
Could language be plainer or meaning clearer! "It is too
soon yet," continued Jefferson, "in our country to say that
every man who cannot find employment but who can find uncultivated
land shall be at liberty to cultivate it, paying a moderate rent. But
it is not too soon to provide by every possible means that as few as
possible shall be with out a little portion of land. The landowners
are the most Precious part of a state."
Jefferson thought legislators could not "invent too many
devices for subdividing" land holdings. Such a device was
invented and eloquently advocated by the most learned men of France of
that period, headed by Quesney, Turgot, Condorcet, Du pont and
Marabeau, with some of whom Jefferson was on terms of intimate
acquaintance. This idea recognized common rights in land by
appropriating ground rent through taxation. This rent of land they
called the produit net -- the net, or surplus, product of land.
Something of the same meaning the English political economist, John
Stuart Mill, later gave to the term "the unearned increment of
land." The French economists proposed in place of the many taxes
falling upon production and upon wealth, one tax large enough to
absorb the whole value of agricultural land. This tax, which they
called the impot unique, and which Marabeau, the elder, accounted a
discovery equal in importance to the invention of writing or the
displacement of barter by money, the Frenchmen wished to apply to
agricultural land, which they regarded as the only productive land.
To-day it is called the single tax, and would be applied to all land
that has value, regardless of improvements, whether the land be
agricultural, mineral, timber, grazing, urban or suburban.
In 1774 Turgot had been appointed Minister of Finance by Louis
XVI., and at once commenced to clear the way for application of the
impot unique, but the privileged nobility was yet dominant and
overthrew him. Had he succeeded in applying it he would have shifted
taxation from the backs of the impoverished and embruited masses to
the game preserves and other great enclosures, would have forced the
nobles to let go and would have opened to users vast quantities of
idle land. But the nobles made successful resistance to this policy.
Turgot stepped down and the social and political revolution was not
long deferred.
In the United States a distant adaptation of this idea occurred
under the Articles of Confederation, in the provision to obtain
national revenue through a tax on real estate and slaves. Subsequently
under the Constitution other sources of taxation were provided, and
most of the revenue came to be raised through a tariff, which is a tax
upon production.
Thus the idea of recognizing equal rights to land and of
penalizing the holding of land out of use, by treating rent as common
property and taking it through taxation, was abandoned. The
appropriator went ahead of the settler. All of the gigantic area
westward from the Atlantic seaboard to the Pacific has long since been
appropriated, or at least all of the accessible and valuable land, and
millions are deprived of their "fundamental right to labor the
earth." Can it now be said that; "from Savannah to
Portsmouth you will seldom meet a beggar?" Is there any part of
the country that does not reveal them? Our farming regions contain
thousands of tramps, and what were they originally but laborers
searching for work! Do not our cities contain multitudes out of
employment or in fear of it, and thereby reduced to that "dependence"
which "begets subservience and venality, suffocates the germ of
virtue and prepares fit tools for the designs of ambition."
Indeed, are not our people "piled upon one another, ... as in
Europe," and have they not as a consequence "become corrupt,
as in Europe?" Have we not one city with a larger population than
the thirteen States contained at the time the "Notes on Virginia"
were written (1781)? And so abjectly poor is a large part of that
city's population that one in every ten who die each year in its
principal and richest borough (Manhattan) is buried in Potter's Field
at public expense! Instead of our government remaining "virtuous
for many centuries," corruption like a worm has eaten its way to
the core. Political bosses control wards, districts and States, and
exert their baleful influences over national councils, as completely
as English politicians in Jefferson's day ruled rotten boroughs and
swayed the British Parliament. The mass of the people themselves were
in the beginning virtuous. But they were reduced to dependence for
subsistence, which corrupted them. They found difficulty in getting a
living and sold or became neglectful of those priceless political
rights for which the fathers of the republic fought so hard and
gloriously, and established with such great labor.
Jefferson said, "Our governments will remain virtuous ...
as long as ... there are vacant lands in any part of America."
There are vacant lands, thousands upon tens and hundreds of thousands
of acres, agricultural lands, grazing lands, timber lands, mineral
lands, urban and suburban lands. These lands, if thrown open, would
not only engage the multitudes of hands now idle or insufficiently
occupied, but would support in comfort and luxury many times the
eighty millions of population this nation now embraces. There is no
difficulty about finding abundance of valuable vacant land; the
difficulty is to find it unappropriated. All the great territory that
is available for any use has been appropriated and made private
property, although vastly the greater part of it lies idle and is held
merely for speculation.
Obviously "the laws of property have been so far extended
as to violate natural right." And since by reason of this
appropriation and non-use of land large numbers of men are prevented
from finding their natural employment, and since "other
employment" is not provided them, does not "the fundamental
right to labor the earth" return to them, as Jefferson said it
must under such circumstances?
Yet how effect this fundamental right to-day with our complex
civilization? Not by dividing up the land and giving to each his
share. The simple, easy, just way would be to divide the rent, or
rather to take it for common uses, remitting all taxes that now fall
upon production and various forms of wealth, and concentrating
taxation on the value of land, regardless of improvements. This single
tax would tax out the land grabber. It would tax idle lands into use.
Millions upon millions of locked up acres of every kind would be
thrown open to the unemployed, there would be a compliance with the "fundamental
natural right to labor the earth," and our people would once
again become, as Jefferson thought they would for centuries remain,
virtuous and happy.
[Henry George, Jr., New York, May 1904]