Spreading the Philosophy of Freedom |
[The welcoming address to those attending the
Henry George Congress. Reprinted from Land and Freedom, September-October 1939]
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In behalf of the Henry George School of Social Science
I give our welcome to all who have come from far and
near to confer. We realize full well, all of us, that this
gathering cannot be merely a love-feast of friends who,
thinking alike, have come together to compare notes and
to report progress. It must needs turn into a council
in which all differences as to methods for spreading our
message must be put aside, all small intolerances as to
ways and means must be forgotten. We must use our
entire strength for spreading the light; our lamps must
be trimmed to burn brighter than ever before.
Civilization at this moment is standing with back
against wall facing destruction. Communism, Nazism,
Fascism have sprung out of the poverty that is the result
of denying the Natural Law. They are the antithesis
of democracy of democracy that stands for freedom;
freedom of production and freedom of trade, as well as
freedom of speech and press and religious expression.
Democracy is a way of government but freedom is a
way of life.
And so we must each of us go forth from this Conference, strengthened, encouraged, inspired to spread this
philosophy of freedom as taught by Henry George. We
must always remember that there are as many ways of
spreading the truth as there are people to spread it;
there are as many ways of spreading it as there are ways
of it being accepted. "Each in the station to which he
has been called, let us do what is set us, and we shall not
clash. From various instruments set to different keys
comes the grand harmony."
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