Ingersoll,
Robert G.

ENLARGE
|
I am satisfied that all human
beings are entitled to the essentials of life, that is to say, to
water, to air, and to land.
[From: The George-Hewitt Campaign,
by Louis F. Post]
|
Ivins,
Molly

ENLARGE
|
Poor ol' Henry George must be
down there in his grave spinnin' like a cyclotron. We, the people
at large, build the freeways, the roadways, the airports, the
schools, the wter and sewer connections, the bridges, the ports
and the sports arenas; we have an raise the children (with ever
less help from the government) who want to move t the far suburbs
and so make the land more desirable, and then the landowners want
us to pay them because we won't allow them to poison the air we
all have to breathe or to pollute the rivers we all have to drink
from. They say we are hurting their land values.
Well, ex-cuuuse me. The air and the water belong to all of us;
it's the polluters who are ruining our property values. Why should
we be paying them?
[From: "Henry George is spinning
in his grave," Kansas City Star, 9 March, 1995]
|
Jackson,
Andrew

ENLARGE
|
Every man is equally entitled
to protection by law; but when the laws undertake to add ...
artificial distinctions, to grant titles, gratuities, and
exclusive privileges, to make the rich richer and the potent more
powerful, the humble members of society -- the farmers, mechanics,
and labourers -- who have neither the time nor the means of
securing like favours to themselves, have a right to complain of
the injustice of their government.
[Source not
known]
The tribes which occupied the
countries now constituting the Eastern States were annihilated or
have melted away to make room for the whites. The waves of
population and civilization are rolling to the westward, and we
now propose to acquire the countries occupied by the red men of
the South and West by a fair exchange, and, at the expense of the
United States, to send them to a land where their existence may be
prolonged and perhaps made perpetual. ...May we not hope,
therefore, that all good citizens, and none more zealously than
those who think the Indians oppressed by subjection to the laws of
the States, will unite in attempting to open the eyes of those
children of the forest to their true condition, and by a speedy
removal to relieve them from all the evils, real or imaginary,
present or prospective, with which they may be supposed to be
threatened.
The prosperity of our country is also further evinced by the
increased revenue arising from the sale of public lands, ...
[From: Second State of the Union
Address, (1832)]
|
Jefferies,
Richard

ENLARGE
|
John Richard Jefferies (1848 - 1887 ) was an English nature
writer, essayist and journalist. He wrote fiction mainly based on
farming and rural life. The Story of My Heart (1883) is an
autobiographical outpouring of his deepest thoughts and feelings.
This our earth this day
produces sufficient for our existence. This our earth produces not
only a sufficiency, but a superabundance, and pours a cornucopia
of good things down upon us. Further, it produces sufficient for
stores and granaries to be filled to the rooftree for years ahead.
I verily believe that the earth in one year produces enough food
to last for thirty. Why, then, have we not enough? Why do people
die of starvation, or lead a miserable existence on the verge of
it? Why have millions upon millions to toil from morning to
evening just to gain a mere crust of bread?
[From: The Story of My Heart
(1883), Chap. X]
|
Jefferies,
Richard
|
That any human being should
dare to apply to another the epithet "pauper" is, to me,
the greatest, the vilest, the most unpardonable crime that could
be committed. Each human being by mere birth has a birthright in
this earth and all its productions; and if they do not receive it,
then it is they who are injured, and it is not the "pauper,"
oh, inexpressibly wicked word! -- it is the well-to-do who are the
criminal classes.
[From: The Story of My Heart,
Chap. X, p. 122]
|
Jefferson,
Thomas
(1743-1826)

ENLARGE
|
Along with Benjamin Franklin, Jefferson was one
of the most inventive and intellectual of the so-called Founding
Fathers of the United States of America. Jefferson was the
principal author of colonial Declaration of Independence from the
British empire and royal subjugation. Among other things Jefferson
wrote concerning the land question was this:
The earth is given as a common
stock for men to labor and to live on. ... Wherever in any country
there are idle lands and unemployed poor, it is clear that the
laws of property have been so far extended as to violate natural
right.
[From: Writings of Jefferson.
Ford, Lesson IX.]
|
Jefferson,
Thomas |
The earth belongs always to
the living generation; they may manage it, then, and what proceeds
from it, as they please, during their usufruct.
[From: Works, Washington's
Edition, III,, 106]
|
Jefferson,
Thomas |
Whenever there is 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..
[From: a letter to Jame's Madison
father, Reverend Madison, 28 October 1785]
|
Jupp,
Kenneth |
People should pay to society
the value of what they receive from society, which is reflected in
the value of the land they occupy. To allow that value to be
bought and sold between private individuals is morally wrong. Land
is, by natural law, the common property of the community.
[Kenneth Jupp served as a Judge on
the British High Court]
|
Kahn,
Alfred E.

ENLARGE
|
I have never seen a convincing
refutation of the Henry George proposition that taxing the rental
value of land would actually increase the supply offered in the
market, whereas taxing capital must to some extent interfere with
the growth of productivity.
[Professor of Economics, Cornell
University; quote from the forward to Tertius Chandler's 1980 book
The Tax We Need]
|
Kant,
Immanuel

ENLARGE
|
All men are originally in a
common collective possession of the soil of the whole
earth.
[From: Philosophy of Law, Part
I., Chap. 2, Sec. 16]
|
Kaysen,
Carl

ENLARGE
|
It is important that the rent
of land be retained as a source of government revenue.
It provides revenue with which governments can pay for socially
valuable activities without discouraging capital formation or work
effort, or interfering in other ways with the efficient allocation
of resources.
[Professor of Economics, M.I.T.; from
a letter dated November 7, 1990 to Mikhail Gorbachev, signed by 30
prominent persons, mostly economists]
|
Keller,
Helen
(1880-1968)

ENLARGE
|
In a letter to a Mr. Hennessy dated January 14, 1930,
Keller wrote:
Who reads shall find in Henry
George's philosophy a rare beauty and power of inspiration, and a
splendid faith in the essential nobility of human nature.
|
Keller,
Helen |
I was deeply touched by your
thoughtfulness in sending me a Braille copy of "Significant
Paragraphs from Progress and Poverty." Each paragraph has
given me a wonderful sense of being in the presence of a great
lover of mankind. I know I shall find in Henry George's philosophy
a rare beauty and power of inspiration, and a splendid faith in
the essential nobility of human nature.
[Source not identified]
|
Kemp,
Jack

ENLARGE
|
Kemp, a leading dissident Republican and advocate of what
has been called supply-side economic policy, included this
statement in a book that revealed his vision for the future:
Property taxes could
profitably be revised to fall more heavily on land rather than, as
at present, penalizing property improvements.
[From the book: An American
Renaissance, p.94]
|
Kenyatta,
Jomo

ENLARGE
|
When the white man came we had
the land and they had the Bible. They taught us to pray with our
eyes closed and when we opened them, they had the land and we had
the Bible.
[Jomo Kenyatta (1889-1978) was prime
minister of Kenya; source of this statement is not known]
|
Keynes,
John Maynard
(1883-1946)

ENLARGE
|
The proposals and analyses of this British economist
served as the basis for the economic policies of numerous
governments following the Second World war. Keynes, who argued
convincingly for for government intervention in the economy to
stimulate private production, not only failed to challenge the
institutional arrangements that permitted the few to monopolize
the earth, he was opposed to the solution proposed by Henry
George. Nonetheless, he did recognize some of: the more subtle,
detrimental side effects of land speculation. On this subject,
Keynes wrote:
There
have been times when it was probably the craving for the ownership
of land, independently of its yield, which served to keep up the
rate of interest ... The high rates of interest from mortgages on
land, often exceeding the probable net yield from cultivating the
land, have been a familiar feature of many agricultural economies
... The competition of a high interest-rate on mortgages may well
have had the same effect in retarding the growth of wealth from
current investment in newly produced capital-assets, as high
interest rates on long-term debts have had in more recent times.
[From: The General Theory of
Employment, Interest and Money, 1936]
|
Keystone Party
(Pennsylvania) |
We believe that the unduly
high price of land in this county, causing high rents for both
factory and home, is the greatest obstacle in the development of
diversified industries in this district. These high prices are due
largely to the speculation in land by which a few individuals
appropriate to themselves the values resulting solely from the
growth of the community.
In order to remedy this, we would greatly relieve the
improvements on land from taxation, and to this end, we favor the
reduction of assessments on such improvements at the rate of ten
per cent a year for a period of five years, thereby reducing taxes
on all improved real estate and somewhat increasing them on land
held out of use. Such a policy would tend to reduce rents and to
cause the improving of unused land to the great benefit of all the
people.
[From the platform of The Keystone
Party, adopted 22 July 1911 (drafted by Ralph E. Smith)]
|
King,
Martin Luther

ENLARGE
|
An intelligent appraoch to the
problems of poverty and racism will cause us to see the words of
the Psalmist, "The earth is the Lord's and the fullness
thereof" -- are still a judgment upon our use and abuse of
the wealth and resources with which we have been endowed.
[From: A Testament of Hope: The
Essential Speeches and Writings of Martin Luther King, Jr.,
pp. 629-630]
|
Kingsley,
Charles
(1819-1875)

ENLARGE
|
God has made the earth free to
all, like the air and the sunshine, and you are shut out from off
it. The earth is yours, for you till it. Without you it would be a
desert. Go and demand your shre of what corn, the fruit of your
own industry.
[From: Alton Locke (1849),
Chap. XXVIII, p. 298 (Speech of Alton Locke in this novel)]
|
Kinsley,
Michael E.

ENLARGE
|
As the late Henry George
famously pointed out, wealth accruing in land operates like a tax
on the productive facotrs in the economy, labor and capital. His
solution was to lower the value of land as close as possible to
zero by taxing away all of the return, or monopoly rent, and using
the money to reduce (or, in his ideal, eliminate) taxes on the
productive factors.
[From a commentary, "Let's Hear
It for a Drop in Home Values," Wall Street Journal,
Thursday, 5 June 1986]
|
Kinsley,
Michael E. |
Ownership of natural resources
like land or oil does not 'create' or 'supply' anything. The
profit from such ownership is a direct transfer from the rest of
society.
[New Republic, June 1981]
|
Kinsley,
Michael E. |
As my favorite economist,
Henry George, pointed out a century ago, inflated land vaues make
the economy less efficient. They operate like a tax on the truly
productive factors, labor and capital.
[From: a column in the Washington
Post, September 22, 1988]
|
Kinsley,
Michael E. |
Ideally, all taxes should be
zero because all taxes discourage the activity being taxed. (The
exception is the land tax, as Henry George famously noted, because
land has nowhere to go.) Taxes on labor discourage work and
encourage sloth. Taxes on capital discourage thrift and encourage
consumption.
[From: an editorial in The New
Republic, February 12, 1992]
|
Kleran,
John

ENLARGE
|
Kleran, a sportscaster, later gained fame as the
jug-eared, wide-eyed star of "Information Please," a
national radio and television question-and-answer programa pioneer
radio broadcaster in the United States, said of Henry George:
No one should be allowed to
speak above a whisper or write more than ten words on the general
subject (of economics) unless he has read and digested Progress
and Poverty.
|
Lalor,
James Fintan |
In early 1847, Lalor, along with many of his fellow Young
Irelanders, founded the Irish Confederation as an attempt to
establish a pacific middle ground between the Repeal movement and
Young Ireland. Lalor also attempted unsuccessfully about this time
to form a Tenant Rights Association in his home county. He was a
regular contributor to nationalist newspapers The Nation
and The Irish Tribune.
The Irish Famine of '46 is
example and proof. The corn crops were sufficient to feed the
island. But the landlords would have their rents in spite of
famine and in defiance of fever. They took the whole harvest and
left hunger to those who raised it. Had the people of Ireland been
the landlords of Ireland, not a human creature would have died of
hunger, nor the failure of the potato been considered a matter of
any consequence.
[source not identified]
|
Lalor,
James Fintan |
I hold and maintain that the
entire soil of a country belongs of right to the entire people of
that country, and is the rightful property not of any one class,
but of the nation at large.
[source not identified]
|
Lapushchik,
Tatiana |
The single-tax that George
proposed, and Tolstoy advocated, promised t remove the slavery.
Under this plan, the economic rent would be nationalized. To do
so, it is not necessary for the government to confiscate all the
land and become the biggest landowner. All that is necessary is
for government to tax the land so that its effective value is
zero. Given the inelastic nature of land supply, it is possible to
capture the whole rent value without affecting the price for the
consumer. An owner might still derive income from improvements,
but what he gets for land he will pass on to the government.
Before, however, we proceed to nationalize rent, it is important
to explain how it arises in the first place. ...
[From: Land Question in Russia:
Debate between Tolstoy and Stolypin, 21 April 1907]
|
Laveleye,
Emile de

ENLARGE
|
We occupy an island, on which
we live by the fruits of our labor; a shipwrecked sailor is cast
up on it; what is his right? May he ... say: ..."I, too, am a
man; I, too, have a natural right to cultivate the soil. I may,
therefore, on the same title as you, occupy a corner of the land
to support myself by my labor?"
[From: Primitive Property,
Chap. XXVII, p.351]
|
Lespinasse,
Paul de |
It is a great pity that Henry
George has not gotten more attention, and Adam Smith and Karl Marx
and their fans less. George's ideas were not only ahead of his
time, they are still ahead of our time.
[Professor of Political Science;
author of Thinking About Politics]
|
Lincoln,
Abraham
(1809-1865)

ENLARGE
|
I respect the man who properly
named these villains land sharks. They are like the wretched
ghouls who follow a ship and fatten on its offal.
The land, the earth, God gave to man for his home, sustenance and
support, should never be the possession of any man, corporation,
society or unfriendly government, any more than the air or water
-- if as much. An individual or company, or enterprise, acquiring
land should hold no more than is required for their home and
sustenance, and never more than they have in actual use in the
prudent management of their legitimate business, and this much
should not be permitted when it creates an exclusive monopoly. All
that is not so used should be held for the free use of every
family to make homesteads and to hold them so long as they are so
occupied.
The idle talk of foolish men, that is so common now, will find
its way against it, with whatever force it may possess, and as
strongly promoted and carried on as it can be by land monopolists,
grasping landlords and the titled and untitled senseless enemies
of mankind everywhere.
On the other questions there is ample room for reform when the
time comes; but now it would be folly to think we could take more
than we have in hand. But when slavery is over and settled, men
should never rest content while oppression, wrongs and iniquities
are enforced against them.
[A letter written to a Mr. Gridley,
of the firm of Davis, Lincoln and Gridley, Attorneys, Bloomington,
IL. Reprinted from: Abraham Lincoln and the Men of His Time
by Robert Browne.]
|
Locke,
John

ENLARGE
|
Locke, the philosopher of England's glorious
revolution that peacefully removed a Catholic king from the throne
in favor of a Dutch prince, William of Orange, understood the
power of the landed interests in a society where nature was, for
all practical purposes, fully controlled by a small, landed elite:
When the sacredness of
property is talked of, it should be remembered that any such
sacredness does not belong in the same degree to landed property.
|
Locke,
John |
It is very clear that God, as
King David says, "has given the earth to the children of men";
given it to mankind in common.
[From: Essay on Civil Government
(1690), Sec. 25.]
|
Locke,
John |
It is in vain in a Country
whose great Fund is Land, to hope to lay the publick charge of the
Government on any thing else; there at last it will terminate. The
Merchant (do what you can) will not bear it, the Labourer cannot,
and therefore the Landholder must: And whether he were best do it,
by laying it directly, where it will at last settle, or by letting
it come to him by the sinking of his Rents, which when they are
once fallen every one knows are not easily raised again, let him
consider.
[From: Some Considerations of the
Consequences of the Lowering of Interest and the Raising the Value
of Money]
|
Locke,
John |
This I do boldly affirm, that
the same rule of propriety, viz., that every man should have as
much as he could make use of, would hold still in the world,
without straitening anybody, since there is land enough in the
world to suffice double the inhabitants, had not the invention of
money and the tacit agreement of men to put a value on it,
introduced (by consent) larger possessions and a right to them.
[From: On Civil Government
(1690), Sec. 34]
|
Longfield,
Mountiford
(Justice)
|
Mountiford Longfield Longfiled was the first holder of the
Whately Professorship of Political Economy at Trinity College
Dublin. Although his Lectures attracted relatively little
attention at the time of publication, they have since been
recognized as containing contributions to economic theory of
outstanding originality. Addressing the central themes of
Classical Economics in his Lectures on Political Economy,
Longfield is unusual amongst his contemporaries in having both a
theory grasp of Ricardian theory, and an avaiable alternative. His
Lectures on Commerce are notable for their contribution to trade
theory.
Property in land differs in
its origin from property in any commodity produced by human labor.
The product of labor naturally belongs to the laborer who produced
it. ...But the same argument does not apply to land, which is not
the produce of labor, but is the gift of the Creator of the world
to mankind. Every argument used to give an ethical foundation for
the exclusive right to property in land has a latent fallacy.
[From: Cobden Club Essays,
1st Series, Part I, Chap. 10, p.72]
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