Conditions in the United Kingdom |
[A letter addressed to Charles O'Connor Hennessy, President of the
International Union for Land Value Taxation and Free Trade, 1935. Reprinted in Land and Freedom,
September-October, 1935]
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DEAR MR. HENNESSY:
I thank you for your cordial invitation to attend the Congress of
the followers of Henry George which is to be held in New York at
the end of September.
I much regret that I am unable to undertake the long journey,
but I would like to send you a few lines to express my best wishes
for the success of the gathering.
There never was a time when the need was greater than it is today
for the application of the philosophy and principles of Henry George
to the economic and political conditions which are scourging the whole
world.
The root cause of world's economic distress is surely obvious to
every man who has eyes to see and a brain to understand. So long
as land is a monopoly, and men are denied free access to it to apply
their labor to its uses, poverty and unemployment will exist. When
the land monopolists do permit the use of land they do so on terms
which extort its full economic value.
Speaking of England particularly, there never was a time when
land values were increasing so rapidly, and it is not an unrelated
fact that for the last few years we have had the largest volume of
unemployment in our history.
At the time I write Europe is trembling on the brink of an
Imperialist War, the magnitude and consequences of which no man
can calculate. The root cause of this impending conflict is land
acquisition for the purpose of alien exploitation. All the diabolical
machinery of modern warfare is to be employed to crush the
independence of a defenseless State and to appropriate its land.
In its saner moments every country admits the ruin which is being
inflicted on world trade by protection and other methods of
artificially created hindrances to the free flow of Commerce; but selfish
interests and a perverted nationalism keep the nations in economic
bondage.
Great Britain's departure from Free Trade has been a disaster,
not only to herself but to the world at large. We no longer can set
an example to the world of the advantages of a Free Trade policy.
Our Protectionist policy is corrupting the political life of the country
and creating vested interests at the expense of the community.
Permanent peace can only be established when men and nations
have realized that natural resources should be a common heritage,
and used for the good of all mankind. It is to inculcate this
fundamental truth that your Congress is meeting, and I hope the day is
not far distant when it will be universally appreciated; and then will
be the age of Freedom based on Eternal Justice.
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