The
Land For The People
THE Land Question
is not merely a question between farmers and the owners of agricultural
land. It is a question that affects every man, every woman, and
every child. The Land Question is simply another name for the great
labor question, and the people who think of the Land Question as
having importance simply for farmers forget what land is.
If you would realize what land is,
think of what men would be without land. If there were no land,
where would be the people? Land is not merely a place to graze cows
or sheep upon, to raise corn or raise cabbage. It is the indispensable
element necessary to the life of every human being. We are all land
animals; our very bodies come from the land, and to the land they
return again.
Whether a man dwells in the city
or in the country, whether he be a farmer, a laborer, a mechanic,
a manufacturer, or a soldier, land is absolutely necessary to his
life. No matter what his occupation may be, if he is engaged in
productive labor, that productive labor, if you analyze it, is simply
the application of human exertion to land, the changing in place
or in form of the matter of the universe.
WE speak of productive
work. What is productive work? We make things. How do we make them?
Man does not create them. Man cannot create something out of nothing.
All the things that we call making are producing; bringing forth,
not creating.
Men produce coal by going down under
the ground, hewing out the coal, and bringing it to the surface
of the earth; they produce fish by going to the lough, or river,
or ocean and pulling the fish out; they produce houses by bringing
together timber and stones and iron into the shape and form of a
house; they produce cloth by taking the wool of a sheep or the fibers
of a plant and bringing them together in a certain connection; they
produce crops by opening the ground and putting in seed and leaving
it there for the germinating influences of nature--always a bringing
forth, never a creation, so that human exertion--that is to say
labor upon land, is the only way that man has of bringing forth
those things which his needs require and which are necessary to
enable him to sustain life. Land and labor-these are the two necessary
and indispensable factors to the production of wealth.
NOW, as to the
rights of ownership-as to that principle which enables a man to
say of any certain thing--"This is mine; it is my property"--where
does that come from? If you look you will see that it comes from
the right of the producer to the thing which he produces. What a
man makes he can justly claim to be his. Whatever any individual,
by the exercise of his powers, takes from the reservoirs of nature,
molds into shapes fitted to satisfy human needs, that is his; to
that a just and sacred right of property attaches. That is a right
based on the right of the individual to improvement, the right to
the enjoyment of his own powers, to the possession of the fruits
of his exertions. That is a sacred right, to violate which is to
violate the sacred command, "Thou shalt not steal." There
is the right of ownership. Now that right, which gives by natural
and Divine laws, the thing produced to him whose exertion has produced
it, which gives to the man who builds a house the right to that
house, to the man who raises a crop the right to that crop, to the
man who raises a domestic animal a right to that domestic animal-how
can that right attach to the reservoirs of nature? How can that
right attach to the earth itself?
WE start out with
these two principles, which I think are clear and self-evident:
that which a man makes belongs to him and can by him be given or
sold to anyone that he pleases But that which existed before man
came upon the earth, that which was not produced by man, but which
was created by God-that belongs equally to all men. As no man made
the land, so no man can claim a right of ownership in the land.
As God made the land, and as we know both from natural perception
and from revealed religion, that God the Creator is no respecter
of persons, that in His eyes all men are equal, so also do we know
that He made this earth equally for all the human creatures that
He has called to dwell upon it. We start out with this clear principle
that as all men are here by the equal permission of the Creator,
as they are all here under His laws equally requiring the use of
land, as they are all here with equal right to live, so they are
all here with equal right to the enjoyment of His bounty.
We claim that the land of Ireland,
like the land of every country, cannot justly belong to any class,
whether that class be large or small; but that the land of Ireland,
like the land of every other country, justly belongs in usufruct
to the whole people of that country equally, and that no man and
no class of men can have any just right in the land that is not
equally shared by all others.
We say that all the social difficulties
we see here, all the social difficulties that exist in England or
Scotland, all the social difficulties that are growing up in the
United States-- the lowness of wages, the scarcity of employment,
the fact that though labor is the producer of wealth, yet everywhere
the laboring class is the poor class--are all due to one great primary
wrong, that wrong which makes the natural element necessary to all,
the natural element that was made by the Creator for the use of
all, the property of some of the people, that great wrong that in
every civilized country disinherited the mass of men of the bounty
of their Creator. What we aim at is not the increase in the number
of a privileged class, not making some thousands of earth owners
into some more thousands. No, no; what we aim at is to secure the
natural and God-given right to the humblest in the community--to
secure to every child born in Ireland, or in any other country,
his natural right to the equal use of his native land.
How can we secure that? We cannot
secure it by dividing the land up equally, by giving each man or
each family an equal piece. That is a device that might suit a rude
community, provided that, as under the Mosaic code, those equal
pieces be made unalienable, so that they could never be sold away
from the family. But under our modern civilization where industry
is complex, where land in some places is very valuable and in other
places of but little value, where it is constantly changing in relative
value, the equal division of the land could not secure equality.
THE way to secure
equality is plain. It is not by dividing the land; it is by calling
upon those who are allowed possession of pieces of land giving special
advantage to pay to the whole community, the rest of the people,
aye, and including themselves--to the whole people, a fair rent
or premium for that privilege, and using the fund so obtained for
the benefit of the whole people. What we would do would be to make
the whole people the general landlord, to have whatever rent is
paid for the use of land to go, not into the pockets of individual
landlords, but into the treasury of the general community, where
it could be used for the common benefit.
Now, rent is a natural and just
thing. For instance, if we in this room were to go together to a
new country and we were to agree that we should settle in that new
country on equal terms, how could we divide the land up in such
a way as to insure and to continue equality? If it were proposed
that we should divide it up into equal pieces, there would be in
the first place this objection, that in our division we would not
fully know the character of the land; one man would get a more valuable
piece than the other. Then as time passed the value of different
pieces of land would change, and further than that if we were once
to make a division and then allow full and absolute ownership of
the land, inequality would come up in the succeeding generation.
One man would be thriftless, another man, on the contrary, would
be extremely keen in saving and pushing; one man would be unfortunate
and another man more fortunate; and so on. In a little while many
of these people would have parted with their land to others, so
that their children coming after them into the world would have
no land. The only fair way would be this-- that any man among us
should be at liberty to take up any piece of land, and use it, that
no one else wanted to use; that where more than one man wanted to
use the same piece of land, the man who did use it should pay a
premium which, going into a common fund and being used for the benefit
of all, would put everybody upon a plane of equality. That would
be the ideal way of dividing up the land of a new country.
THE problem is
how to apply that to an old country. True we are confronted with
this fact all over the civilized world that a certain class have
got possession of the land, and want to hold it. Now one of your
distinguished leaders, Mr. Parnell in his Drogheda speech some years
ago, said there were only two ways of getting the land for the people.
One way was to buy it; the other was to fight for it. I do not think
that is true. I think that Mr. Parnell overlooked at that time a
most important third way, and that is the way we advocate.
That is what we propose by what
we call the single tax. We propose to abolish all taxes for revenue.
In place of all the taxes that are now levied, to impose one single
tax, and that a tax upon the value of land. Mark me, upon the value
of land alone--not upon the value of improvements, not upon the
value of what the exercise of labor has done to make land valuable,
that belongs to the individual; but upon the value of the land itself,
irrespective of the improvements, so that an acre of land that has
not been improved will pay as much tax as an acre of like land that
has been improved. So that in a town a house site on which there
is no building shall be called upon to pay just as much tax as a
house site on which there is a house.
I said that rent is a natural thing.
So it is. Where one man, all rights being equal, has a piece of
land of better quality than another man, it is only fair to all
that he should pay the difference. Where one man has a piece of
land and others have none, it gives him a special advantage; it
is only fair that he should pay into the common fund the value of
that special privilege granted him by the community. That is what
is called economic rent.
BUT over and above
the economic rent there is the power that comes by monopoly, there
is the power to extract a rent, which may be called monopoly rent.
On this island that I have supposed we go and settle on, under the
plan we have proposed each man should pay annually to the special
fund in accordance with the special privilege the peculiar value
of the piece of land he held, and those who had land of no peculiar
value should pay nothing. That rent that would be payable by the
individual to the community would only amount to the value of the
special privilege that he enjoyed from the community. But if one
man owned the island, and if we went there and you people were fools
enough to allow me to lay claim to the ownership of the island and
say it belonged to me, then I could charge a monopoly rent; I could
make you pay me every penny that you earned, save just enough for
you to live; and the reason I could not make you pay more is simply
this, that if you would pay more you would die.
THE power to exact
that monopoly rent comes from the power to hold land idle--comes
from the power to keep labor off the land. Tax up land to its full
value and that power would be gone; the richest landowners could
not afford to hold valuable land idle. Everywhere that simple plan
would compel the landowner either to use his land or to sell out
to some one who would; and the rent of land would then fall to its
true economic rate--the value of the special privilege it gave would
go not to individuals, but to the general community, to be used
for the benefit of the whole community.
I cannot pass on without mentioning
the name of one of the distinguished Irishmen who have declared
for the principle long before they heard of me. I refer to only
one name. Many of you know, and doubtless all of you have heard,
of Dr. Nulty, the Bishop of Meath.
IN 1881, before
I had ever been in Ireland or Dr. Nulty had ever heard of me, he
wrote a letter on the Land Question to the clergy and laity of the
diocese of Meath. Dr. Nulty lays down precisely the principle that
I have endeavored to lay down here before you briefly, that there
is a right of ownership that comes from work, from production; that
it is the law of nature, the law of God, that all men should work;
that what a man produces by his labor belongs to him; that the reservoir
from which everything must come--the land itself--can belong to
no man, and that its proper treatment is just as I have proposed
to let there be security of possession and to let those who have
special privileges pay into the common fund for those privileges,
and to use that fund for the benefit of all. Dr. Nulty goes on to
say what every man who has studied this subject will cordially endorse,
that the natural law of rent-- that law by which population increases
the value of land in certain places and makes it grow higher and
higher--that principle by which, as the city grows, land becomes
more valueable--that that is to his mind the clearest and best proof,
not merely of the intelligence but of the beneficence of the Creator
For he shows clearly that that is the natural provision by virtue
of which, if men would only obey God's law of justice, if men would
only obey the fundamental maxim of Christianity to do to others
as they would be done to them: that by virtue of that provision,
as the advance of civilization went on, it would be towards a greater
and greater equality among men-not as now to a more and more monstrous
inequality.
THESE are the plain,
simple principles for which we con tend, and our practical measure
for restoring to all men of any country their equal rights in the
land of that country is simply to abolish other taxes, to put a
tax upon the value of land, irrespective of the improvements, to
carry that tax up as fast as we can, until we absorb the full value
of the land, and we say that that would utterly destroy the monopoly
of land and create a fund for the benefit of the entire community.
How easy a way that is to go from an unjust situation like the present
to an ideally just situation may be seen among other things in this.
Where you propose to take land for the benefit of the whole people
you are at once met by the demands of the landlords for compensation.
Now, if you tax them, no one ever heard of such an idea as to compensate
a people for imposing tax.
In that easy way the land can again
be made the property in usufruct of the whole people, by a gentle
and gradual process.
WHAT I ask you
here tonight is as far as you can to join in this general movement
and push on the cause. It is not a local matter, it is a world-wide
matter. It is not a matter than interests merely the people of Ireland,
the people of England and Scotland or of any other country in particular,
but it is a matter that interests the whole world. What we are battling
for is the freedom of mankind; what we are struggling for is for
the abolition of that industrial slavery which as mud enslaves men
as did chattel slavery. It will not take the sword to win it. There
is a power far stronger than the sword and that is the power of
public opinion. When the masses of men know what hurts them and
how it can be cured when they know what to demand, and to make their
demand heard and felt, they will have it and no power on earth can
prevent them. What enslaves men everywhere is ignorance and prejudice.
If we were to go to that island
that we imagined, and if you were fools enough to admit that the
land belonged to me, I would be your master, and you would be my
slaves just as thoroughly, just as completely, as if I owned your
bodies, for all I would have to do to send you out of existence
would be to say to you "get off my property." That is
the cause of the industrial slavery that exists all over the world,
that is the cause of the low wages, that is the cause of the unemployed
labor.
HOW can you remedy
it? Only by going to first principles. only by asserting the natural
rights of man. You cannot do it by any such scheme as is proposed
here of buying out the landlords and selling again to the tenant
farmers. What good is that going to do to the laborers? What benefit
is it to be to the artisans of the city? And what benefit is it
going to be to the farming class in the long run? For just as certain
as you do that, just as certain will you see going on here what
we have seen going on in the United States, and by the vicissitudes
of life, by the changes of fortune, by the differences among men--some
men selling and mortgaging, some men acquiring wealth and others
becoming poorer--in a little while you will have the reestablishment
of the old system. But it is not just in any consideration. What
better right has an agricultural tenant to receive any special advantage
from the community than any other man? If farms are to be bought
for the agricultural tenant, why should not boots for the artisans,
shops for the clerks, boats for the fishermen--why should not the
Government step in to furnish everyone with capital? And consider
this with regard to the buying out of the landlords. Why, in Heaven's
name, should they be bought out? Bought out of what? Bought out
of the privilege on imposing a tax upon their fellow-citizens? Bought
out of the privilege of appropriating what belongs to all? That
is not justice. If, when the people regain their rights, compensation
is due to anybody it is due to those who have suffered injustice
not to those who have caused it and profited by it.
|