A Right Royal Roast
Thomas Flavin
[A response to an editorial by William Cowper Brann, titled "Henry
George Voodoo," 12 August 1897]
MR. W. C. BRANN:
In your editorial on the "Henry George Hoodoo," which
appears in the August number of the ICONOCLAST, the following passage
occurs:
"It seems to me that I have treated the Single
Taxers as fairly as they could ask, and if I now proceed to state a
few plain truths about them and their faith they will have no just
cause to complain."
From the tone and tenor of these words it is fair to assume that in
the editorial referred to you have discharged against the Single
Taxers and their faith the heaviest broadsides of which your ordnance
is capable. If, notwithstanding all the time you have wasted "crucifying
the economic mooncalf" which has played such sad havoc with the
wits of Single Taxers, it should turn out that the monstrous concept,
far from being crucified, annihilated, or even "dying of its own
accord," only gathers strength, energy, and renewed activity from
the healthful exercise with which you provide it, must it not seem the
part of prudence for you, even if occasion of regret for us, that you
should abandon the war and leave the calf to his fate? Your belated
and apparently desperate resolve to "tell some plain truths"
about us, Single Taxers, justifies the inquiry, what were you telling
before? The fact that it seems to yourself that you have treated
Single Taxers fairly is not absolutely irrefragible proof that they
have been so treated at least it has not brought conviction of the
fact to them. That the offer of your space to Mr. George was
courteously declined affords no just ground for refusing it to those "whose
matin hymn and vesper prayer reads, there is no God but George,"
etc. I'll warrant you that if you and the Single Taxers had access on
equal terms to a journal which neither controlled, and whose space
both were bound to respect, you would not have to go outside the
limits of your own state to find a dozen foemen worthy of your steel,
and I'd stake my life on it that you'd find not a few to unhorse you.
This is not claiming that any one of them, or all of them together,
can come anywhere near you in the artistic manipulation of words or
the construction of ear-tickling phrases; but it is claiming, and that
without any false pretense of modesty, that they have yet seen no
reason to fear you in rigidly logical argument when the Single Tax is
the question at issue. Their cause is so palpably just, its underlying
principle so transparently simple and elementary, its practical
application so direct, feasible and efficient that no mere wizardry of
words, no thimble-riggery or language, can by any possibility obscure
the principle--or confuse the advocates. Of course there are among
Single Taxers, as among other enthusiasts, men who indiscreetly use
abuse for argument, and of these you may have some reason to complain;
but should not your great talents and the immense advantages which the
undisputed control of your own journal give you, enable you to rise
above their abuse, to ignore it completely, and to grapple with only
those who present you with argument? I have no right to expect from
you more consideration than has been meted out to better men; still,
you can but refuse this rejoinder to your August editorial, which is
respectfully offered for publication in your journal. If you are quite
sure of your ground, you can only gain strength from exposing my
weakness, but even if you are not sure of it, both the requirements of
simple justice and the amende honorable to Single Taxers would still
plead for the publication of this article.
You say that Mr. George has obtained no standing of consequence in
either politics or economics "because his teachings are violative
of the public concept of truth." Do you really believe that the
fact that he has obtained no standing of consequence in politics is in
any way derogatory to his character or his teaching? Do you not know
full well that a Bill Sykes, a Jonas Chuzzlewit, or a Mr. Montague
Tigg would have a hundred chances to attain that distinction to-day to
the one chance that Henry George, Vincent de Paul or even Jesus Christ
would have? Don't you know this well, and if you do, why do you use it
as an argument against Henry George? As to his standing in economics,
that, I submit, is a matter of opinion. You think he has no standing
of consequence; I think his teaching is the most active ferment in the
economic thought of to-day. We may be both mistaken, but whether we
are or not cuts no figure in the truth or falsity of the Single Tax.
But it is worth while to point out that the reason you have given for
his lack of "standing" lends neither weight nor force to
your argument. "Because," you say, "his teachings are
violative of the public concept of truth." When did the public
concept of truth become the standard by which to test it? The public
concept of the best form of money is, and has been for thousands of
years, gold and silver coins. I am much mistaken if that be your
concept. By the way, why did you not say "violative of truth,"
instead of "violative of the public concept," etc.? I guess
you had an inward consciousness that a thing is not true or false by
public concept, but by being inherently so. What Henry George taught
was inherently true or false before he ever taught it, and would be so
still if he had been never born. The only difference would be that so
many of us who now bask in the blessed light of inward, if not of
outward, freedom would, in that event, be still barking with the great
blind multitude over every false trail along which blinder teachers
might be leading them and us.
You admit that Mr. George is a polemic without a peer, and you say
that "no other living man could have made so absurd a theory
appear so plausible, deceived hundreds of abler men than himself."
Surely there is something very faulty in the position you assume here.
If what you say be so, how do you know that you are not yourself the
victim of deception at the hands of some inferior? Or is it only men
who have "gone daft on Single Tax" that possess the
extraordinary power of leading abler men than themselves by the nose?
Surely that were too much honor for an antagonist to concede to them.
More surely still, if a man's intelligence is not proof against
deception by inferiors in argument, he can never reach finality in a
process of reasoning, and logical proof for him there is none.
"He mistakes the plausible for the actual and by his sophistry
deceives himself." O pshaw! We all say things sometimes that just
do for talk, but this hasn't even that poor excuse. I might just as
well say, "He takes the conceivable for the supposable and by his
logic enlightens himself. One statement would be as valuable as the
other and neither would be worth a pinch of snuff. Come, let us argue
with dignity and composure, like honest men sincerely searching after
truth, and eager to lend a hand in abolishing this social Inferno of
legalized robbery which fairly threatens to consume us all.
There is, you'll admit, such a thing as land value, i. e. value
attaching to land irrespective of improvements made in or on it by
private industry. This value arises from the presence of a community
and can never actually exist without it. If the exclusive creator or
producer of a thing is its rightful owner, land belongs to the
community that creates or produces it, and can never, in the first
instance, rightly belong to any other owner. The Single Tax is the
taking of this value for this community. Is it just? The highest
homage, the highest act of faith which the human mind and heart can
offer to God is to say that He could not be God and pronounce the
Single Tax unjust! Here now is a gage of battle cast at the feet of
whoever wishes to take it up, be the same logician, metaphysician or
theologian. (Pardon me, Mr. Brann, for momentarily turning aside from
you.)
The justice of the Single Tax is beyond all question of refutation.
What about its efficiency for the cure of social ills? Here, I think,
is where we are widest apart. You say, "the unearned increment is
already taken for public use under our present system of taxation."
If by "unearned increment" you mean what I have defined as
land value (and I think you do) your statement is the wildest and most
astounding I ever heard or read from a sane man making an argument. Is
it possible you have not learned that where all the land value is
taken in taxation there can be no selling value? And where is the land
to-day with a community settled upon it that has not selling value? If
land value is already absorbed by taxation, what is it that goes to
maintain landlordism? Perhaps you'll contend that landlordism doesn't
exist. What value is it that a man pays for when he buys an unimproved
lot in the heart of a city? What is it that the boomer booms and the
land speculator gambles on when he adds acre to acre and lot to lot
without any intention of productive use? What, if not the community
value which he expects to attach to his land as a result of increase
of population? And what advantage to him as a speculator would this
community value be if, as you claim, it is now being absorbed in
taxation and should continue to be so absorbed as fast as it arises?
Do landlords in cities and towns retain for themselves only the rent
of buildings and hand over to the government the full amount of their
ground rents as tax? I know an old eye-sore of a building in this city
not worth $150, whose occupant pays $100 a month rent. Do you
seriously believe that all of this $1,200 a year which does not go to
the city and state in taxes is rent on the old $150 rat-warren? Why,
the thing is too childish for serious discussion; and to have
discussed it with you without having been driven to it by yourself, I
should have regarded as in the nature of a slight on your
intelligence. If what you claim as a fact were true, we would have the
Single Tax in full swing now and would be fretting ourselves to
fiddle-strings, not to bring it about, but to get rid of it for its
evil fruit.
As to whether the Single Tax, in full force, would provide enough
revenue for municipal, county, state and federal governments, we,
Single Taxers, are not greatly concerned. We have our own opinions on
that question and can give better reasons for them than our opponents
can give for theirs. But the question is not essential to our
argument. What we hold to is that until land values fully taxed prove
inadequate for the expenses of government economically administered,
not one cent should be levied on labor products, no matter in whose
possession found. This, however, belongs to the fiscal side of our
reform. Of infinitely more importance is the social side. Here our end
and aim is to secure to all the sons of Adam an equal right to life,
liberty and pursuit of happiness by securing to them an equal right in
the bounties of nature--and passing strange it certainly is that men
who would not dream of denying this right in the abstract are ever
ready to anathematize it in the concrete.
With the Single Tax in force, that is, with the plain behest of
nature observed and respected, no man will hold land out of use when,
whether he uses it or not, he must pay to the community its annual
value for the privilege of monopolizing it. No man will hold land for
a rise in community value when that value is taken from him for the
use of the community as fast as it arises. No man will need to
mortgage his home and the earnings of his most vigorous years to a
boomer or speculator for the privilege of living on the earth for
there will be no boomer or speculator to sell him the privilege, and
the privilege itself will have ceased to be such and become an
indefeasible right.
"He (Mr. George) is a well-intentioned man who confidently
believes he can make the poverty-stricken millions prosperous by
revoking the taxes of the rich and increasing the burthens of the
poor." Fie, fie! What is to be gained by such transparent,
palpable misrepresentation as this? Do you verily believe that land
values, which Mr. George proposes to tax, are mainly in possession of
the poor? Did you not see--of course you did--a diagrammatic exhibit
made not long ago by the New York Herald of the holdings of twenty New
York real estate owners? Let me quote a passage from an article in the
New York Journal on this exhibit:
"The reason 170 families own half of Manhattan
Island, as stated in the Herald, and that 1,800,000 out of the two
million residents of Manhattan Island, until very recently, had no
interest whatever, except as renters, in this superb property, is
because, until the last few years, it required a fortune to own the
smallest separate parcel of this great estate. Only the rich could
participate in its ownership, its income, its profits."
Now is it your view that all this is but clumsy lying, and that in
reality it is the poor people of New York as of other large cities
that own the bulk of its land values? Again you say, "He would
equalize the conditions of Dives and Lazarus by removing the tax from
the palace of the one and laying it upon the potato patch of the
other." This statement is much more artistic than the preceding
one. It wears a jaunty semblance of truth. Indeed it is true in a
sense as far as it goes. But it is vague and incomplete, and for that
reason as deceptive and misleading as half truths always are. With
your permission I will fill it out in parenthesis and convert it into
an honest whole truth: "He would equalize the conditions of (both
freedom and justice for) Dives and Lazarus by removing the tax from
the palace of the one (and from the labor products of the other) and
laying it upon (the community value of the land occupied by the palace
and) the potato patch of the other." Now, if the potato patches
of the poor occupy, as a rule, more valuable land than the palaces of
the rich, there might be some apparent ground for your contention. It
would be only apparent, however, for in such a case the potato patch
would be as much out of place as a public school on a wharf front. To
devote highly valuable land to ordinary potato culture would be about
as sensible as to print the Sunday edition of the Galveston News on
costly linen paper. One of the virtues of the Single Tax is its
potency to prevent such stupid waste of opportunity. Your way of
stating the case, however, has this virtue that it is a welcome
variation of the old wearisome chestnut about the poor widow owning a
valuable lot, etc.
You believe Progress and Poverty inspired by the plutocracy, "250,000
of whom own 80 per cent. of the taxable wealth of the country, while
the land is largely in possession of the great middle class."
Passing over the source of the inspiration, you have come pretty close
to the truth here! Unfortunately for you, however, the statement has
no value in the argument. Single Taxers do not need to deny that the
great middle class largely own the land, but they do claim, and you
won't have the hardihood to deny it, that the plutocracy own the vast
bulk of the land values. You will perceive the distinction when you
reflect that the land is nearly all out in the country, while the land
values are nearly all in the cities and towns. To tax land according
to area is the bug-a-boo you are putting up your guards to; to tax it
according to community value is what we invite you to smash if you
can. You "cannot understand how a man possessed of common sense
could fail to see that removing taxation from the class of property
chiefly in the hands of the rich and placing it altogether on property
chiefly in the hands of the comparatively poor, could fail to benefit
the millionaire at the expense of the working man." Neither can
I, if you tax it according to quantity, but that is not the Single Tax
and it is time you knew it. Let me tell you now something that I can't
understand--why a man who has the means and the ability to strike
giant blows for the cause of the blind, stupid, plundered humanity
prefers to waste his time, his talents, his opportunities making
himself a straw man and, with that silly-looking thing for antagonist,
belaboring all about him like a bull in a china shop. You sincerest
well-wishers, of whom I claim to be one, earnestly hope you will soon
change your tactics.
You ask some practical questions which it may be well to answer: "How
will you prevent the Standard Oil Company forcing weaker concerns to
the wall by the simple expedient of selling below cost of production?"
The Standard Oil trust is maintained (1) by monopoly of oil lands; (2)
by monopoly of pipe lines; (3) by collusion with railroads. The Single
Tax and its corollaries would absolutely destroy each of these
advantages; (1) by throwing unused oil lands open to all on equal
terms; (2) by government ownership or complete control of pipe lines
to all distributing points, such lines being open for use to all oil
producers on equal terms; (3) by exactly analogous treatment of
railroads. With the three-fold monopoly of oil lands, pipe line, and
railroad abolished, the Standard Oil trust would find no wall against
which to crush weaker concerns. As to the trust, we hope that the
abolishment of the thieves' compact, i.e. the protective tariff, will
make the trusts sick unto death. Absolute free trade, a necessary
concomitant of the Single Tax, will leave 99 per cent. of the trusts
stranded. If any survive it will not be the fault of the Single Tax.
Be it remembered that the evils which the Single Tax is guaranteed to
cure are, primarily, land monopoly, and, secondarily, all the other
monopolies based upon it; as those of the coal, iron and lumber trust,
the Standard Oil trust, etc.
"With coal fields leased to the operators by Uncle Sam, how
would you prevent Hanna organizing a pool, limiting production,
raising prices and reducing wages?" Coal fields are included in
the economic term, land. When unused land is free for occupancy,
unused coal fields will also be free. If Mark sought to limit
production by shutting down his mines, one of two things would happen.
Either somebody else would start in to mine coal, or Mark's tax would
be raised till the wisdom of either letting go or resuming would dawn
on his fat wits. Unless he owned or controlled the coal fields he
could not limit production, raise prices, or cut down wages. "How
will you prevent the Standard Oil company forcing weaker concerns to
the wall by the simple expedient of selling below cost of production?"
We wouldn't prevent them. But if they afterwards tried to recoup their
losses by raising prices as they do now, we might get after them with
a tax commensurate with their asinine generosity, and keep after them
till other concerns got well on their feet. If they became too
refractory, what's to prevent the government from taking hold itself
and working the oil wells for the benefit of the whole people?
Remember the government is theoretically the people's servant, and it
could be actually so if the people only had a little intelligence and
moral courage.
You very needlessly tell your Ft. Hamilton friend that land is the
primal source of all wealth; that it does not produce wealth, but
simply affords man an opportunity to produce it; you forgot to
add--provided the landlord doesn't prevent him. You say in another
place, "Figure it as you will, adjust it as you may, a tax is a
fine on industry and will so remain until you get blood from turnips,"
etc. This very objection in protean form is continually being raised
by a class of shallow-thinking men with whom the editor of the
ICONOCLAST should not be proud to herd. "What difference docs it
make," they say, "whether I pay rent to the government or to
a landlord when I've got to pay it anyhow? And what difference does it
make whether taxes are levied on my land or my improvements, or both,
so long as I've got to pay them with the products of my labor?"
Now, it is quite true that all taxes of whatever nature are paid out
of the products of labor. But must they be for that reason a tax on
labor products. Let us see. I suppose you won't deny that a unit of
labor applies to different kinds of land will give very different
results. Suppose that a unit of labor produces on A's land 4, on B's
3, on C's 2 and on D's 1. A's land is the most, and D's is the least,
productive land in use in the community to which they belong. B's and
C's represent intermediate grades. Suppose each occupies the best land
that was open to him when he entered into possession. Now, B, and C,
and D have just as good a right to the use of the best land as A had.
Manifestly then, if this be the whole story, there cannot be equality
of opportunity where a unit of labor produces such different results,
all other things being equal except the land. How is this equality to
be secured? There is but one possible way. Each must surrender for the
common use of all, himself included, whatever advantages accrues to
him from the possession of land superior to that which falls to the
lot of him who occupies the poorest. In the case stated, what the unit
of labor produces for D, is what it should produce for A, B and C, if
these are not to have an advantage of natural opportunity over D.
Hence equity is secured when A pays 3, D, 2 and C, 1 into a common
fund for the common use of all--to be expended, say in digging a well,
making a road or bridge, building a school, or other public utility.
Is it not manifest that here the tax which A, B and C pay into a
common fund, and from which D is exempt, is not a tax on their labor
products (though paid out of them) but a tax on the superior advantage
which they enjoy over D, and to which D has just as good a right as
any of them. The result of this arrangement is that each takes up as
much of the best land open to him as he can put to gainful use, and
what he cannot so use he leaves open for the next. Moreover, he is at
no disadvantage with the rest who have come in ahead of him, for they
provide for him, in proportion to their respective advantages, those
public utilities which invariably arise wherever men live in
communities. Of course he will in turn hold to those who come later
the same relation that those who came earlier held to him. Suppose now
that taxes had been levied on labor products instead of land; all that
any land-holder would have to do to avoid the tax is to produce little
or nothing. He could just squat on his land, neither using it himself
nor letting others use it, but he would not stop at this, for he would
grab to the last acre all that he could possibly get hold of. Each of
the others would do the same in turn, with the sure result that by and
by, E, F and G would find no land left for them on which they might
make a living. So they would have to hire their labor to those who had
already monopolized the land, or else buy or rent a piece of land from
them. Behold now the devil of landlordism getting his hoof on God's
handiwork! Exit justice, freedom, social peace and plenty. Enter
robbery, slavery, social discontent, consuming grief, riotous but
unearned wealth, degrading pauperism, crime breeding, want, the
beggar's whine, and the tyrant's iron heel. And how did it all come
about? By the simple expedient of taxing labor products in order that
precious landlordism might laugh and grow fat on the bovine stupidity
of the community that contributes its own land values toward its own
enslavement! And yet men vacuously ask, "What difference does it
make?" O tempora! O mores! To be as plain as is necessary, it
makes this four-fold difference. First, it robs the community of its
land values; second, it robs labor of its wages in the name of
taxation; third, it sustains and fosters landlordism, a most
conspicuously damnable difference; fourth, it exhibits willing workers
in enforced idleness; beholding their families in want on the one
hand, and unused land that would yield them abundance on the other.
This last is a difference that cries to heaven for vengeance, and if
it does not always cry in vain, will W. C. Brann be able to draw his
robe close around him and with a good conscience exclaim, "It's
none of my fault; I am not my brother's keeper."
It will not do, my dear friend; you must think again on the Single
Tax, even though, in doing so, you might make men suspect that you are
not infallible. The sublimest act it will ever be given you to perform
is to candidly confess to your grand and ever-growing constituency
that you were mistaken in your estimate of the Single Taxers and their
faith. "Government must compel each to pay toll in proportion the
amount of wealth it has produced--and this is the only equitable law
of taxation." Just reflect for a moment what a monstrous
conclusion flows from these premises. Labor applied to land produces
all wealth. Landlordism as such produces nothing. Therefore labor
should bear the whole burden of taxation, while landlordism and all
other forms of monopoly should go scot free. The iniquity of our
present system of taxation is that a portion of it is levied on land
instead of being all levied on labor products, like the tariff! To be
strictly just, we must quit taxing land and exact no royalty from
owners of coal mines and oil wells! That your view?
"There is every indication that his cult has had its day and is
rapidly going to join the many other isms, political and religious,
that have been swallowed up like cast off clothes and other exuviae by
the great mother of dead dogs." This is fine, incontestably fine!
Also forcible, impressibly forcible--with the force of a squirt of
tobacco juice. If "the Single Tax party will not long survive its
creator," perhaps it is because it has not as much attraction for
the great sovereign voter as the blessed protective tariff, which, to
use your own fantastic expression, you should "cosset on your
heaving brisket" for its splendid success as a survivor of its
primogenitors. Look at the pinnacle of political success to which the
McKinley bill has brought Bill McKinley (excuse the paltry little pun)
and sound money (saving your presence) brought Grover Cleveland, and
then contemplate the ignominy and obscurity has brought George and
free silver has brought Bryan. Evidently George isn't a mouse to
McKinley, while Bryan is but a brindle pup compared to the great and
only Grover. Yes, the "public concept of truth" makes it
plain that protection is all right and Single Tax all wrong. "George
is a reformer who can't reform because he took issue with the wisdom
of the world," just like the man who said that the earth was
round and that the sun didn't go round it every twenty-four hours,
contrary to what the wisdom of the world had long ago decided.
You are not mistaken in saying that "Mr. George was unable to
keep one of these expounders of his doctrine (a S.T. paper) from
running on the financial rocks." It is a very logical deduction
to draw from this fact that the teachings of the paper were worthless.
Why should anybody teach what does not, in the teaching, promote his
financial prosperity? See what fools Professors Bemis and Andrews have
made of themselves. Because they did not have due regard for the "public
concept of the truth" they are cashiered; and it serves them
right, for the truth must be vindicated--if it pays. On the other
hand, see what splendid financial successes the ICONOCLAST, the
Galveston News and the so-called yellow journalism of New York all
are. "Deserve, in order to command success," the old
copy-book headline used to say, from which it follows as mud does
rain, that whatever succeeds deserves it, and whatever doesn't,
doesn't. It doesn't take much besides capital to succeed, however, "where
the conditions for the propagation of empiricism are more favorable
than ever before." All you have to do is to propagate and expound
the "public concept of truth" and let the truth itself
alone. The Single Taxers respectfully solicit some more plain truths
on the "Mumbojumboism of George." THOMAS FLAVIN.
. . . Ever since the appearance of my first courteous critique of the
Single Tax theory the followers of that faith have been pouring in
vigorous "replies"; but as my articles were directed to Mr.
George and not to his disciples, I saw no occasion for the latter to
intermeddle in the matter, and the tide of economic wisdom went to
waste. Although a publisher is supposed to be privileged to select his
own contributors, and Mr. George had been requested to make reply at
my expense, the Single Taxers raised a terrible hue and cry that the
ICONOCLAST was unfair in that it "permitted one side to be
presented." In order to cast a little kerosene upon the troubled
waters I decided that they should be heard, and selected Dr. Flavin as
their spokesman, believing him to be the ablest of those who have
followed this particular economic rainbow into the bogs. So much by
way of prolegomenon; now for the doctor.
My very dear sir, I shall heed your advice to "rise above"
the abuse of those who mistake impudence for argument, and ignore the
discourteous remarks with which you have so liberally interlarded your
discourse. Doubtless you include yourself among that numerous tribe of
Texas titans who can "unhorse" me as easily as turning a hen
over; and having accorded you unlimited space in which to acquire
momentum, I would certainly dread the shock were I cursed with an atom
of polemical pride. Frankly, I wish you success--trust that you can
demonstrate beyond a peradventure of a doubt that all my objections to
the Single Tax are fallacious, that it is indeed the correct solution
of that sphinx riddle which we must soon answer or be destroyed. At a
time when the industrial problem is pressing upon us with ever
increasing power, it is discouraging to hear grown Americans prattling
of "unhorsing" economic adversaries--priding themselves on
polemical fence, like shyster lawyers, and seeking victory through
sophistry rather than truth by honest inquiry. That is not patriotism,
but a picayune partisanship which I profoundly pity.
Regarding "the public concept of truth" which seems to
irritate you sorely, I will simply say that the people are slow to
accept new and startling truths like those promulgated by Galileo,
Newton and Harvey; but a truth, howsoever strange, GROWS year by year
and age by age, while a falsehood creates more or less flurry at its
birth, then fades into the everlasting night of utter nothingness.
That Mr. George's theory, after several years of discussion, is
declining in popular favor, and has never made a convert among the
careful students of political economy, is strong presumptive evidence
that it is not founded on fact. The more you hammer truth the brighter
it glows; the more you hammer Georgeism the paler it gets. It is not
for me to prove the fallacy of the Single Tax theory--the onus
probandi rests with its apostles, and they but saltate from mistaken
premises to ridiculous conclusions. Like the German metaphysicians,
they are abstract reasoners who do not trouble themselves about
conditions. It is not well to sneer at "the great blind multitude"
because it fails to see the beauty or wisdom in the Single Tax, for
many a great man before Lincoln's time had profound respect for the
judgment of the common people. "Truth," say the Italians, "is
lost by too much controversy;" and while the Georges and Flavins
split hairs and spute and spout themselves into error, the hard-
headed farmer and mechanic, exercising their practical common-sense,
arrive at correct conclusions. In saying that Mr. George has, by his
sophistry, "deceived hundreds of abler men than himself," I
simply accredited him with a feat that has been a thousand times
performed. Carliostro was an ignoramus and possessed very ordinary
intellect, yet for several years he succeeded in deceiving some of the
wisest men of his day with his Egyptian Masonry idiocy. Thousands of
fairly intelligent people believed poor looney Francis Schlatter a
kind of second Messiah, some of the ablest men of Europe were misled
by half-crazy Martin Luther--and Dr. Flavin regards Henry George's
economic absurdities as omniscience. The latter has "mistaken the
plausible for the actual," has deceived himself with his own
sophistry, else he and his few score noisy followers are wiser than
all the rest of the world, or, for the sake of gain or cheap
notoriety, he's peddling what he knows to be arrant nonsense. You may
take as many "pinches of snuff" on that proposition as you
please.
All your remarks about land values, their origin and rightful
ownership--the tiresome old piece de resistance of every Single Tax
discourse--I answered fully in my two former articles on this subject,
wherein I also explained how the "unearned increment" is at
present appropriated by the public, and I cannot afford to rethresh
old straw for the benefit of Single Taxers who WILL write and WON'T
read. I will remark en passant, however, that by "unearned
increment" I mean exactly what I suppose Mr. George to
mean--increase in the market value of land for which the proprietor is
not responsible. This, I have explained, is already appropriated by
the public, because the total annual increase in land values in this
country--barring betterments of course--does not exceed the total
annual tax levied upon the land. There's always a boom in land values
here and there; but hundreds of millions of acres, urban and suburban,
have not increased a penny in selling price during the past decade.
The owners are reaping no unearned increment, but they are paying
taxes regularly into the public till. "The exclusive creator or
producer of a thing is the rightful owner," says Dr. Flavin.
Quite true; and as the only thing the community creates for the land
owner is the unearned increment, it has no moral right to take
anything more. The Single Taxers persist in ignoring the fact that
there is an EARNED as well as an UNEARNED increment, and that the
former is as much the property of the individual as the barn he builds
or the calf he breeds. Of this earned increment more anon.
"The highest homage, the highest act of faith which the human
mind and heart can offer to God is to say he could not be God and
pronounce the Single Tax to be unjust!" O hell! That's not
argument, but simply empty declamation intended to tickle the ears of
the groundlings--to raise a whoop among the gallery gods. As you have
suggested, "Come, let us argue with dignity and composure,"
instead of emitting fanatical screeches like fresh converts at a
Methodist campmeeting, let's see about this God of Justice business:
About 200 years ago a party whom we will call Brann, as that happened
to be his name "cleared" a farm in the wilds of Virginia,
enduring all the hardships and dangers of the frontier. He built roads
and bridges, drained swamps, exterminated Indians and wild animals.
His descendants helped drive out the British butchers, some of them
being scalped alive by John Bull's red allies, while their wives and
children were tomahawked. They contributed in their humble way to
secure the blessings of free government which the present inhabitants
of Virginia enjoyed. They helped support schools, churches and
charities and otherwise make the district desirable as a place of
residence. Finally railways were built and stores opened, not to
enrich these people, but to be enriched by them. These conveniences
added to the value of the land, but were paid for at a good round
price, as such things ever are by the users. The land is now worth
about $30.00 an acre, and while this value is unquestionably due to
the presence of populatoin,{sic} it is fair to assume that in two
centuries the estate has yielded that much in the shape of taxes. As
the present owner, I ask, has the Old Dominion against that property
for unearned increment? I say it has not; that the $30.00 an acre
represents the savings of seven generations of my ancestors; that
while the community created the land value, said value has been duly
purchased and paid for--that it represents EARNED increment. Unearned
increment is not what Dr. Elavin is after; he would confiscate the
RENT of my patrimony; he would deprive me of the VALUES created by my
people--would allow me no larger share therein than he accords to the
newly arrived immigrant from that damned island we call England. If
our God says THAT is just, then I want no angelic wings--prefer to
associate with Satan. Has the son a just right to wealth created and
solemnly bequeathed him by his sire? That land is as much mine as the
gold would be mine, had my people their savings in that shape, and the
rent is mine as justly as the interest on the gold would be. It is
quite true that none of my clan CREATED that land; it is true that I
cannot show a title to it signed by God Almighty and counter- signed
by the Savior, any more than I can show a title from the same high
source to the watch I hold in my hand; but I have a title to all the
rights, conveniences and profits appertaining to control of the land,
issued by their creator, the community, for value received. I have the
same title to the land that I have to the watch; not to the material
made by the Almighty, but to whatsoever has been added of desirability
thereto by the action of man. The community has been settled with
up-to-date for both the land and the watch, but has a continuing claim
against them so long as it enables me to employ them advantageously
than I could without its assistance. If I sell my land the purchaser
receives in return for his money all those advantages which it
required so many years of toil and danger to win--he pays for the
sacrifices made by others in preference to going into the wilderness
and making them himself. The market value of my land is a "labor
product," just as my watch is a labor product, hence all this
prattle about relieving industry of governmental burdens by any
economic thaumaturgy whatsoever is the merest moonshine.
It is quite true that "the great middle class" does not own
the most valuable lots in New York and London; but I have the "chilled
steel" hardihood to affirm that not only the bulk of the land but
of the land values are in the possession of people who are poor as
compared with the occupants of those sumptuous palaces which the
George conspiracy for the further enrichment if Dives and the
starvation of Lazaras would exempt from taxation. The total wealth of
this nation is not far from 75 billions, while all the land, exclusive
of improvements, would not sell for more than 20 billion. The naked
land of our 5 million farms is estimated at about 10 billion, so that
leaves but about 10 billion for urban lands--less than one-seventh of
the total value. I have no reliable statistics at hand showing what
proportion of urban inhabitants own their homes; but we may safely
assume that one-half do so. Now, if this be true, we may also assume
that the land values held by the very wealthy--the people whom the
Single Taxers profess to be after,--do not exceed one-fourth of all
land values, or one-fifteenth of total property values. Hence you see
it is quite possible for 250,000 to own 80 per cent of ALL values,
while the bulk of the LAND values remain with the common people. And
it is these common people that the Single Tax will crush for the
benefit of these 250,000 plutocrats, the bulk of whose wealth is in
personal property.
Sit down and think it over, doctor; you are really too bright a man
to be led astray by the razzle-dazzle of Single Tax sophistry. You do
your enviable reputation for intelligence a rank injustice by
mistaking poor old George for an economic Messiah, and if you are not
careful somebody will try to sell you a gold-brick or stock in a
Klondike company. Suppose that you and Hon. Walter Gresham occupy
residence lots worth $1,000 each, but that you inhabit a $1,500
cottage and he a $150,000 mansion; and suppose that your income is
$2,000 a year while his is $20,000: Do you think there is any
necessity for tearing your balbriggan undershirt because not compelled
to put up as much for the maintenance of government as your wealthy
neighbor? Is it at all probable that Gresham will become discouraged,
refuse to longer serve the corporations and sit in the woodshed and
sulk, even jump off the bridge, because taxed in proportion to the
property in his possession rather than according to the land he
occupies? If Col. Moody builds a million dollar cotton mill on
suburban land worth but $500 why should you refuse to sleep o' nights
because not required to pay double the taxes of that old duffer? As a
worthy disciple of Aesculapius you should know that too heavy a burden
on your own back is liable to make you bow-legged.
I suspected all along that the Single Tax would require several
able-bodied "corollaries" to enable it to effect much of a
reformation, to usher in the Golden Age. It were very nice to throw
unused coal and oil lands "open to all on equal terms," have
the government pipe off all their products for equal pay, then compel
operators by piling on taxes to maintain high prices to consumers "till
other companies got well on their feet"--and a combination was
effected. If Rockefeller, Hanna, Carnegie, et id genes omnes tried any
of their old tricks "we might get after them"--just as we
HAVE long been doing. These plutocrats are so afraid of our
politicians that there is danger of their dying of neuropathy. If the
coal, iron and oil operators advance prices we'll advance their
taxes--for the people to pay. And I suppose that when the whiskey
trust get gay, the doctor will raise the rent of corn land, when the
cotton-seed oil trust becomes too smooth, he'll knock it on the head
by adding a dollar an acre to cotton land, and so on until we get the
cormorant fairly by the goozle. It's all dead easy when you understand
it--works as smoothly as an "iridescent dream" on a toboggan
slide! We are continually discovering new coal, iron and oil
districts, and these are "open to all on equal terms"--I can
acquire them just as cheaply as can Rockefeller or Carnegie. Then
what's the matter? I lack the capital to properly develop them, to
produce so cheaply as my wealthy competitors. Or if able to become a
thorn in the side of the great corporations they either lower prices
and freeze me out or make it to my advantage to enter the syndicate.
When Rockefeller lowers the price of oil he lowers his rent; when I am
either crushed by competition or taken in out of the cold, he advances
the price of oil. His rent is regulated by competition for the use of
oil lands--you cannot make him pay more than the market price. When
you raise his rent you raise that of all the other operators in
proportion, and the same is the same as an increase of the excise on
whisky--the people get a meaner grade of goods at a higher price. If
an ordinary man cooked up such a scheme as that for the benefit of the
people, I'd feel justified in calling him a "crank," and I
cannot conceive how a man like Dr. Slavin can tack his signature to
such tommy-rot. Before we can make the Single Tax "a go"
we've got to have government ownership of telegraphs, railways,
pipe-lines, etc., etc., and use the taxing power to regulate prices
just as the Republicans do the tariff--and for what? To humble the
haughty landlord? Oh no; to knock the stuffing out of capital--so long
wept over by Single Taxers as a fellow sufferer with toil. Why not
call the George system Communism?--"a rose by any other name,"
etc.
When the doctor get matters arranged it will really make no
difference whether a farmer is located in the black-waxy district, or
on the arid cactus-cursed lands of the trans-Pecos country, as he will
have to surrender to the public all he produces in excess of what the
poorest land in use will yield. He will have no incentive to study the
capabilities of his land and bring to bear upon it exceptional
industry, for he will be deprived of all the increase he can make it
yield by such methods. A will be placed on a parity with D because he
took the best land he could get instead of the poorest he could find.
Intelligence and enterprise are to have no reward under the new
regime. You can squat on a sand-bank or pile of rocks in any community
and be on a financial parity with the man whose black soil reaches to
the axis of the earth--no need to bundle the old woman into a covered
wagon, tie the brindled cow to the feed-box and head for a country
where better land is to be had. There will be no temptation to carve
out a home in the wilderness, for later immigrants will set at naught
your toil and sacrifices and deprive your children of their
patrimony--the best situated merchant in Waco will have no advantage
of the keeper of a tent store on a side street of Yuba Dam or
Tombstone. A tax will not longer be "a fine on industry"--it
will be a fine on fools.
My Galveston friend should not work himself into a fit of hysteria
because I declared that the George doctrine has had its day, it being
sheer folly to quarrel with a self-evident fact. When Henry George
first flamed forth he made a great deal of money out of his writings,
and has thus far shown no more aversion to the silver than has your
humble servant. His paper was doubtless launched with a view of
promoting his financial and political fortunes, for he did not go
broke publishing it "for the good of the cause," but
promptly rung off when he found that it did not PAY, hence I fail to
see that he is entitled to any more credit than Col. Belo or myself. I
called attention to the failure of his paper, not in a spirit of
rejoicing over its downfall, but simply to accentuate the fact, after
giving some years to consideration of his rather pretty platitudes,
that people condemned them--that his heroic attempt to reclothe with
living flesh the bones of the impot unique had proven a dismal
failure. Now, my dear doctor, I have not undertaken in this hasty
article to fully expose this Single Tax fallacy, having attended to
that heretofore, but simply to answer a few of your arguments which I
had not hitherto heard. Let's drop the subject--let the dead go bury
its dead, while we devote our energies to LIVING issues.
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