[An address delivered at the Banquet of the Henry George Foundation,
3 September, 1926. Reprinted from Land and Freedom, Vol. XXVI, No.5, September-October 1926]
|
IT requires a good deal of temerity to address a body
such as this on the subject of "What Henry George
Taught." Most of you are as well informed as I am on the
subject better perhaps. But because there has been a
recent tendency to emasculate or attenuate the doctrines of
the Master, perhaps what I have to say may not be
inappropriate to this occasion.
It is one of the misfortunes of our movement inseparable
perhaps because the method we propose for its adoption
is to use the machinery of taxation that the attention of
our friends has been focussed on its obvious fiscal
advantages. These have intrigued some of us into confining
ourselves too greatly to the simplicity and attractiveness of
its fiscal method while ignoring the end that is aimed at.
This end is so tremendous in its social consequences that to
treat it, as it has so often been treated, as a change in the
method of taxation is to fail in impressing the minds of
men with the true import of our message.
It is this too great emphasis laid upon the method of
achieving our end rather than the end itself this
over-accentuation of the fiscal side of our programme that led
Robert Scott Moffatt in his work on Henry George to
speak of "those who may not be prepared to believe that
the ills of society are to be remedied by a change in the
incidence of taxation."
It is this over-emphasis on the taxation side of our
proposals that has led our socialist friends, failing to
apprehend its profounder implications, to reject it as "A middle
class reform."
It is because he early divined the danger that might
overtake the movement that Lawson Purdy counselled with
Henry George on the advisability of a separation in our
preachments between the great purpose in view and Taxation per se.
Again it is because of this attenuation of our movement
to a so-called Single Tax movement that the
Commonwealth Land party, formerly the Single Tax party, was
called into being with its more definite declaration of our
aims and purposes. This was a natural and, as I take it,
a wholesome reaction.
No one has spoken more strongly on this point than
Henry George himself. Had we always borne in mind
this truth, there would have been no occasion for the
misunderstandings and the differences that have crept into
our movement; these would not have appeared. What
Mr. George says contains all the gospel of our teaching
method, all the light we need to walk by.
Here is what Mr. George wrote:
"The reform we propose, like all true reforms, has both
an ethical and an economic side. By ignoring the
ethical side, and pushing our proposal merely as a reform
of taxation, we could avoid the objections that arise from
confounding ownership with possession and attributing to
private property in land that security of use and
improvement that can be had even better without it. All that we
seek practically is the legal abolition, as fast as possible
of taxes on the products and processes of labor, and the
consequent concentration of taxation on land values
irrespective of improvements. To put our proposals in this way
would be to urge them merely as a matter of wise public
expediency.
There are indeed many Single Tax men who do put our
proposals in this way; who seeing the beauty of our plan
from a fiscal standpoint do not concern themselves further.
But to those who think as I do, the ethical is the most
important side. Not only do we not wish to evade the question of
private property in land, but to us it seems that the
beneficent and far-reaching revolution we aim at is too great a
thing to be accomplished by 'intelligent self-interest,' and
can be carried by nothing less than the religious conscience."
When Henry George had completed his great task, he
wrote: "The truth I have endeavored to make plain will
not find easy acceptance. If that were so, it would have
been accepted long ago. But it will find friends those who
will work for it, live for it, if need be die for it." Now I
do not think anybody is willing to die for a change in the
incidence of taxation. I think few of us would be willing
to face the Grim Reaper before the appointed time merely
for the sake of getting rid of the General Property Tax.
And troublesome as the Income Tax is to many of you, I
am quite sure you would rather continue to pay it than to
avoid it by dying even though your death could furnish
a splendid example. Evidently quite evidently Henry
George had something very different in mind.
I think, and all of us here think, that what he referred to
was his purpose to set free the earth for the use of
mankind. He has said: "Do what you please, reform as you
may, reduce taxes as you may, you cannot get rid of
widespread poverty as long as the element on which and from
which all men must live is the property of some men." The
system that makes private property of fixed portions of
the planet, that shuts men out from the reservoir of the
earth, or charges men for permission to use it, was what he
set out to destroy. He aimed at no mere change in
taxation he aimed to get the land for the people, and his
method was to take the economic rent of land , through and by
the present tax gatherers, through and by the machinery
of taxation that he found conveniently at hand.
If there had been some other method than the use of the
taxing machinery, depend upon it he would have adopted
it and would never have referred to taxation at all. For what
he sought was no reform in taxing methods, but the
restoration to mankind of their right to the use of the earth.
And now we come to another matter that appears to be
troubling our friends whether this shall be a gradual process
or whether it is possible for it to be done all at once. I do not
know whether the "inevitableness of gradualness," to
adopt a happy phrase of James A. Robinson, is inescapable
or not. But I do know this: It is a fatal weakness of
any propaganda to stress, out of respect to the feelings of
the timid or conservative, the slow and gradual approaches
to its accomplishment. We bring a glowing message of
hope to mankind. We promise them a vision of the New
Jerusalem. But we add, "Stay, good people, do not be
alarmed that we shall get to the promised land too soon.
We propose to go step by step. It is true that the rent of
land belongs to you, but any suddenness about taking it
is not thinkable." What sort of an impression do we
create? Who is thrilled by it? Who is even convinced?
What was Henry George's reply to the question, "When
would you put your system in operation?" His answer was:
"Nine o'clock tomorrow morning."
The stressing of the purely fiscal part of our programme
has led us away from the spiritual essence of our teachings.
The Hebrew prophets sought not merely the physical
liberation of their people. They saw that their spiritual
liberation was bound up with their material freedom. In the
same way it was something more than the unjust
distribution of wealth that was the impelling force back of the
writing of Progress and Poverty and the great task Henry
George had set himself. He saw, and we may see it, too,
that the old prophecy is the true one that links the freedom
of the spirit with the absence of earthly tyranny and
oppression. Let us in the language of the poet William Blake
find something that may fittingly inspire us :
"I will not cease from mental fight,
Nor shall the sword sleep in my hand
Till we have built Jerusalem
In all this green and pleasant land."
Do not all of us know that we have seen a star? Henry
George has shown it to us. And again the lines of another
poet occur to me Tennyson this time:
"I saw a star, and there behind the star
I saw the spiritual city and all its spires."
Can we not see it, too? And it is not by limiting our
propaganda to taxation, or by timid or hesitating proposals
that we shall lay the foundations of that spiritual city.
We need not concern ourselves with the probable course of
this movement. Ours the task to deliver the message,
knowing no compromise, preaching the full doctrine
without jot or tittle of qualification. The rest is in the lap of
the gods.
Now I want to strike a note of hope. We are met to
celebrate the birthday of a man who wrote a book nearly
fifty years ago. During those fifty years perhaps thirty
thousand books on political economy have been written
and published. Most all of these have been consigned to
the dustbin of oblivion. This one book alone survives.
We have heard a great deal of the Pittsburgh Plan today,
yet in New York we take more economic rent than is taken
in that city or any other in the United States. That is due
to the influence of Henry George and in great degree to
administrative measures fathered by those who derived
their inspiration from the work written by an humble
California printer. Nearly ten thousand miles from where
we are seated, the Federal capital of Australia, Canberra,
has adopted the system taught in that book. Henry George
has directed changes in the fiscal systems of centers of
industry and population as widely separated as New York
and Sydney. Is there anywhere in any language a book
whose influence in so short a time has girdled the globe?
I know the social effects of these partial applications have
been very small. I know the arguments used to put them
over have been purely fiscal ones. But never mind that
now. They are the thoughts of Henry George made
articulate in municipal legislation. And I hope and trust that
the Henry George Foundation organized here today will
carry this great message further, abating nothing of its
implications, and bringing to the men and women of our
land the great truth of their inalienable right to the
resources of the earth.
|