Justice Secured?
PART TWO
Edward J. Dodson
PART II: The Break With Britain
A Conservative Rebellion Driven by Radical Rhetoric?
Discontent among what began as a large minority of Britain's
colonial subjects in North America arose gradually and in response
to actions taken by political leaders in the mother country
to exercise greater control over colonial affairs. Eventually,
colonial challenges to the authority of King and Parliament found
their way into the newspapers and periodicals circulating throughout
the colonies (and, to a lesser extent, in Britain). As discontent
became protest and the general population took sides, not only
British domination but many institutions of colonial society came
under attack.
When the colonials finally began to express their grievances, they
found a rich heritage of dissent available to support their cries
against the perceived injustices of Parliamentary acts and Crown
prerogatives. The colonials and their advocates in Britain claimed
individual and collective rights secured by England's own glorious
revolution. The found in John Locke a champion for their cause
and in writing his powerful statements conservatives in Britain
could hardly ignore. To many within the ranks of the conservative
colonials, they were being victimized by a vast corruption of the
social contract; and, when such a condition prevailed, the duty of
people was to act to secure the rights they held against their
government:
As usurpation is the exercise of power which another hath a right
to, so tyranny is the exercise of power beyond right, which nobody
can have a right to; and this is making use of the power anyone has
in his hands, not for the good of those who are under it, but for
his own private, separate advantage.(8)
What Locke and others had written, a great many colonials accepted
intuitively as the condition of their existence. A new generation of
writers selectively combined the wisdom of Old World philosophers
and theoreticians with rhetoric appropriate to their current
struggle in an effort to redefine "the social and
governmental contract."(9)
The attachment of philosophers to a higher level of principle than
what was operating in Britain or anywhere in the Old World was in
North America very much a confirmation of experience. More than a
century of salutary neglect by Britain had provided to
several generations of colonials the opportunity for experimentation
in self-government and a degree of freedom from societal constraint
not experienced in the Old World for thousands of years. Although
those colonies under British domination traced their origins to the
early seventeenth century, European expansion in the New World
occurred very slowly and during a period of constant warfare between
the emerging maritime states. By the mid-eighteenth century,
however, Spanish military power had collapsed under the weight of
internal corruption, leaving a gap destined to be filled by Britain.
As North America became increasingly important as a source of
agricultural products, animal furs and other raw materials, each of
the European powers made some effort to solidify control over
existing territorial claims. During the early 1750s another in the
long series of European wars spilled over into the Americas. French
and British regulars, supported by colonial militia and indigenous
tribes, waged a war that eventually left Britain in titular control
over a vast North American empire.
During the early phase of the conflict, French forces dominated
the struggle and seemed close to victory. A very real concern of the
British and colonial leaders was the possibility that the Iroquois
tribes, who had long served as a buffer between British and French
interests, might be lost as allies. A congress was called together
in Albany, New York to assure the Iroquois of Britain's ultimate
victory and to promise the Iroquois they would share in any
territorial gains. Seven of the thirteen colonies sent
representatives, including Pennsylvania (represented by Benjamin
Franklin). This congress was important to the future United States
for several reasons. The seeds of self-government and cooperation
between the colonies were being planted, although not yet ready to
bear fruit. Benjamin Franklin, more than any other colonial leader,
understood the advantages of forging a strong confederation; the
success of the Iroquois League had not escaped his notice, and he
was eager to replicate its virtues among the European-American
colonials:
There is a writer of our day ... who has written an intriguing
work entitled The Importance Of Gaining And Preserving The
Friendship Of The Indians. I do not know Mr. Kennedy [the author]
personally or what qualifications he has, but this is of little
importance, for what he has to say makes good sense. He comments in
detail on the strength of the League which has for centuries bound
... the Iroquois together in a common tie which no crisis, however
grave, since its foundation has managed to disrupt. Further, this
League does not infringe upon the rights of their individual
tribes.(10)
At the Albany congress, Franklin stepped forward with a dramatic
proposal "that all of British America be federated under a
single legislature and a president general to be appointed by the
Crown."(11) To his dismay, his fellow colonials either
ignored or rejected his call for union. With French victories
threatening the colonies and reclaiming the frontier, the British
military was about to take control of the war -- ending the period
of salutary neglect and setting the stage for an escalation of
conflict between the colonials and their British governors.
In 1758, the elder William Pitt became Britain's Secretary of
State. One of his first acts was to put the British forces in North
America under the command of two young officers -- Jeffrey Amherst
and James Wolfe. Soon, British fortunes in the field were reversed;
by 1760 both Quebec and Montreal had fallen. The Peace of Paris in
1763 yielded all of Canada and more to Britain. The financial cost
to Britain of supplying such a large military force had been
extraordinary; and, at the end of the war Parliament looked upon
Britain's distant colonial subjects as a logical source for tax
revenue needed to reduce the nation's debt. Colonial reaction was to
be as one would expect from individuals who felt no indebtedness to
a government in which they had no real voice.
The British constitution of government virtually guaranteed that
Parliament would be dominated by the most privileged and
conservative class in British society. These men were, for the most
part, staunch defenders of Britain's expansionist policies and the
nation's mercantilist foundation. Their own aristocratic attachment
to landed property also made them instinctively committed to the
defense of the privilege they enjoyed. When the colonials' cry of
no taxation without representation reached them, they
immediately understood that "nothing was more likely to
overthrow the privileged class [of England] than the application of
this rare levelling principle in Great Britain."(12)
Britain's landed and merchant classes were unwilling to share either
power or privilege with their colonial counterparts. As a
consequence, the stage was set for growing conflict and inevitable
rebellion.
Ironically, an often overlooked characteristic of mid-eighteenth
century society in North America was that much of the wealth and
most positions of authority were, as in Britain, inherited or
restricted to an elite group of families. Many of the colonials at
the center of resistance to the Navigation Acts and who were angered
by the arrival of more and more Crown officials were members of the
landed and merchant classes, were equally opposed to a general
democracy and staunchly defended the system of positive law under
which they enjoyed considerable privilege and advantage. They were
certainly the most Anglophiled of the colonials. And yet,
they became a serious threat to their British counterparts when they
began to demand an equal voice in a government never designed to be
either representative or democratic.
From the perspective of conservative colonials, their liberty was
severely threatened by the imposition of unwarranted and unjust
usurpations of power. Representation in the British Parliament
became a trigger issue, and they demanded an end to the system of
virtual representation, under which "even the richest man
in America would be debarred from voting for the members of
Parliament who would represent him."(13) So long as the
colonials had been ruled by salutary neglect there had been no
reason for the colonials to assert their rights or challenge the
British constitution. What British leaders failed to account for was
the sense of equality felt by the colonials. The basis for this
atmosphere of equality, observes historian Charles Andrews, arose
out of colonial institutions:
... but in the existence in every colony of a miniature house of
commons which was exercising full powers over legislation,
membership, and finance, and claiming legislative equality with the
highest legislative body of the realm. Such a claim affected the
very constitution of the British empire itself, for it asserted that
the empire was not a single state made up of a mother country and
her dependencies, but rather a group of states equal in status, with
coordinate legislatures and a common king.(14)
By and large, the colonials enjoyed a far greater degree of
liberty than did the general population of the British Isles. And,
for those not inclined to yield to authority of any kind, there was
the frontier and the wilderness beyond.
Benjamin Franklin was certainly among the vanguard of colonial
leaders to publicly express dissatisfaction with the manner in which
Parliament and the Crown dealt with colonial concerns. He was also
among a small minority directly exposed to the school of French philosophes
who "popularized not only a faith in humanity and an ideal
of a free and equal society, but also specific economic and
political doctrines"(15) that mirrored what Franklin had
learned by his own experience and reason. Although most of those who
represented the colonial establishment desired nothing more than to
protect their privileged status, these determined few dreamed of
constructing a new society they hoped would secure widespread
liberty and equality of opportunity (at least for the population of
European-American males). Out of their debates arose a consensus
around fundamental principles of representative government and a
more complete doctrine of human rights. The extent to which the
principles they espoused were compromised under the Constitution and
positive law subsequently adopted continues to haunt us to this day.
In the debates that occurred during the crucial formative stage of
the nation, there was great concern expressed by the leading
participants over measures they believed would advance or thwart the
cause of liberty. And yet, there was no real agreement on
the full scope of what our liberties are and how they would best be
secured and protected. John Adams, representing one point of view,
believed that only a strong, national government could protect
individual liberty. Conversely, Thomas Paine took the position that
the greater the powers given to a national government the greater
the risk of tyranny and oppression. Even Paine, however, feared
external powers more than the police powers he felt were needed by a
national government to maintain the sovereignty of the states. The
colonials, ultimately victorious on the battlefield, were still
seriously divided over important questions of principle. Yet they
somehow had to come together in order to protect themselves from
very real external threats.
These individuals had only their powers to reason and their own
experience to point the way. No nation had yet realized
self-government under institutions of representative democracy. To
some, liberty was primarily the right or freedom to accumulate
property (landed and otherwise), to engage in business and commerce
without interference by the State and to be freed from the unjust
burden of heavy taxation. Others thought of liberty in terms of
civil rights (e.g., the right to vote, to hold elected and appointed
offices, to a trial by jury, etc.). Democracy as a cornerstone of
their societal structure was at once instinctive to the
communitarian aspects of the frontier and feared by those holding
entrenched power along the coast and inland waterways. In a world
everywhere dominated by the few, the colonials were logically more
concerned with majority rule than minority rights. They held varying
opinions about religious freedom and the separation of Church and
State; however, all but a few (of which Paine was the most notorious
for his deistic attack on organized religion in The Age Of Reason)
thought of the nation as Christian, and Protestant. Individuals
belonging to other sects would remain as outsiders, sometimes
persecuted and often taunted. So long as the frontier existed,
nonconformists could escape the majority and establish their own
communities and set up their own governments. No one anticipated the
rapid increase in population or the diversity of those who would
come from abroad. Jefferson, almost alone, knew there would come a
time when his vision of a nation of yeoman farmers would fade, but
he was shocked by the appearance of a large propertyless class
within his own lifetime.
Under the British constitution and by virtue of tradition, the
individual was by definition a subject of the Crown. Rights against
the government were awarded based primarily on aristocratic
privilege, titleholdings acquired during the centuries of civil
strife, or (in a growing number of instances) influence obtained by
financiers and businessmen. Those who enjoyed and benefitted from
political and economic privilege were sure they were deserving of
their protected status, and just as sure that the propertyless were
not deserving of very much protection under the law. Within the
colonial elite, the same attitudes directed that while a somewhat
united resistance to a distant King and Parliament might be forged,
only a very few would step beyond the bounds of unenlightened
self-interest. The quest for independence attacked the British
government on the basis of principles advanced by Old World
philosophers for more than a century. The people who inhabited the
colonies and came forward to fight the British were instinctively
drawn by reason to principles that simultaneously seemed to protect
property while securing civil liberties.
Another aspect of the colonial struggle was the strange position
of Britain's military force having to assume the dual role of
defending British property interests while fighting the rebels. Many
colonials, remaining loyal to the empire, relied on the British army
for securing of their person and property. Thus, the war presented
the strange dichotomy of two opposing military forces (each directed
by socio-politically conservative, and generally elitist, leadership
groups) attempting to prevent the destruction of the colonial stock
of physical wealth while fighting over who would govern and control
this vast territory. Neither group was prepared for the degree of
change that was soon to occur; they (and their descendants) would
continue to hold their conservative aspirations for a very long
time. In the United States this ongoing conservatism would take form
in an ongoing opposition to democratization of the republic.
What conservative colonials failed to realize until too late,
however, was that the majority of their countrymen entertained a
vision of an independence from the British empire very different
from their own. As one historian has concluded:
The American Revolution was more than simply a struggle to free
the colonies from English control; it was more than a civil war
between Whigs and Tories. It became as well a movement to obtain
certain democratic rights for the American people: emancipation of
slaves, humane penal codes, greater freedom of worship, termination
of aristocracy in landholding, expanded suffrage, and broader
educational opportunities.(16)
Once committed to the rebellion, most Americans expected
victory to produce greater equality of opportunity as well as
personal freedom. By 1776 the momentum of both rhetoric and action
set the stage for a radical departure from the status quo or a
return to salutary neglect. Or, as historian Bernard Bailyn writes:
"[E]verywhere there were discussions of the ideal nature of
government; everywhere principles of politics were examined,
institutions weighed, and practices considered."(17)
More than most others of his position in colonial society, Thomas
Jefferson anticipated the rising tide of democracy and greater
demand for equality of opportunity. In his writing and direct
involvement in the debate he struggled to incorporate an egalitarian
spirit into what he viewed as a just system of law.(18) For example,
while limiting political participation to his own race and gender,
Jefferson's proposals to guarantee each White, adult male sufficient
land on which to support himself and his family suggests that he was
more aware than most of the relationship between just
socio-political arrangements and the need to grant all citizens at
least a minimum degree of access to the earth.
In our own time we have a tendency to view the written
Constitution drafted by the Framers and adopted by the States as the
standard against which just socio-political arrangements are
pursued. Those who both forged and criticized the Constitution
during the late eighteenth century were more "conscious
rather of its defects than its merits."(19) Along these
lines, Jefferson's advice to his countrymen proved to be rather
prophetic:
The time for fixing every essential right on a legal basis is
while our rulers are honest and ourselves united. From the
conclusion of [the Revolution] we shall be going down hill. It will
not then be necessary to resort every movement to the people for
support. They will be forgotten, therefore, and their rights
disregarded. They will forget themselves, but in the sole faculty of
making money. ...The shackles, therefore, which shall not be knocked
off at the conclusion of this war, will remain on us long, will be
made heavier and heavier.(20)
On the one hand, Jefferson recognized the necessity for a uniform
legal structure to nourish and preserve liberties won with
bloodshed; yet (particularly in private correspondence) he expressed
an ever-growing concern over the future of the new nation:
The real friends of the constitution in its federal form, if they
wish it to be immortal, should be attentive by amendments to make it
keep pace with the advance of the age in science and experience.
Instead of this, the European governments have resisted reformation,
until the people, seeing no other resource, undertake it themselves
by force, their only weapon, and work it out through blood,
desolation, and long-continued anarchy.(21)
While supporting the constitutional initiative, Jefferson's
writing implies an already developed pessimism. He seemed to sense
that the window of opportunity for radical change created by the
rebellion had by the late 1780s been closed. The conservative
elements in the nation already controlled most of the best
agricultural land, physical wealth, trading centers and financial
reserves; they were not about to allow the winning of independence
from Britain to simultaneously accomplish the destruction of their
privileged positions. Although, as Jackson Turner Main has written,
"[b]y European standards there was ... no upper class at
all, since there was no hereditary aristocracy,"(22) the
continuation of traditional land tenure law favored the inheritance
and accumulation of landed property. Thus, in practical terms, the
increase in population after the rebellion facilitated the creation
of a small but very wealthy landed elite. Many lost their personal
fortunes in the great land speculations that accompanied opening of
the interior, but those who gained control over fertile acres with
good access to transportation routes could not help but to accrue
tremendous benefit over time. By comparison, however, Americans
had much to feel positive about:
The American of the 1780s had reason, as he viewed his society,
for some cautious optimism. Classes remained, to be sure, and he
might note with alarm the concentration of wealth and the growing
number of poor, but the Revolution had made great changes, and
westward the land was bright.(23)
Westward the land was bright indeed, and countless thousands would
soon leave what experience told them was a corrupted eastern
seaboard for the virgin and unsettled lands of the west. By the
beginning of the nineteenth century, and though still thinly
populated and newly independent, the majority of citizens looked not
to the Constitution nor their leaders to protect their liberty;
rather, they looked to the frontier. From the very beginning of the
nation, in fact, our forefathers seemed to instinctively realize
that as great as the differences were from those of the Old World
they were not sufficient to protect the republic from internal
strife and representative democracy from corruption.
We know that the experience of living in the United States has for
countless millions fallen far short of the promise contained in the
Declaration of Independence. Why this has been so has been debated
endlessly during the life of our nation. We have periodically
amended our Constitution, restructured and reorganized our political
institutions and several times transformed the engine of our
economic system. Still, problems of inequality of opportunity
remain; still, the concentration of titleholdings in nature and the
ownership of production grows;(24) still, the just society remains
an elusive goal of only some, while others work to maintain the
socio-political arrangements and institutions that have for so long
provided them an easy living. I assert that Franklin and Paine,
particularly (and Jefferson, in most respects), knew in their own
time the changes that justice required. Their writings reveal an
awareness and acceptance of measures that would bring equal access
to nature to all members of society and thereby secure a state of
true liberty governed by the constraints of just principles. Among
the writings of Franklin, Paine and others can be found a clear
presentation of the principles upon which just socio-political
arrangements must be forged.
Justice and privilege cannot co-exist; they are mutually exclusive
and privilege thrives at the expense of justice. Moreover, there is
no greater privilege at work in society than a system of
titleholdings to nature that sanctions the private appropriation of
the exchange value of nature. Wherever this occurs the result is a
concentration of nature and wealth into the hands of a privileged
few. What follows is a presentation of the socio-political
philosophy and system of political economy espoused by those few who
cast aside conventional wisdom in a quest for truth and justice.
PART III: The Wealth of Nations Belongs to its Producers, the
Exchange Value of Nature Belongs to All
The period following the American Revolution was
characterized by a rapid growth in commerce and an expansion of
trade into external markets. "The commercialization of
society in itself," writes historian Drew McCoy, "marked
the birth of a distinctly modern order that represented a dramatic
and dislocating break with the past."(25) No single
individual was more responsible for analyzing and exploring the
socio-political dynamics at work at the time than was the Scottish
philosopher and political economist Adam Smith. His ground breaking
work, The Wealth Of Nations, attempted to establish a
scientific framework for the investigation into human behavior. The
approach he pioneered endured and expanded until the late nineteenth
century, when specialization appeared within the professional ranks
of the social scientist. For more than a century, however, political
economy dominated intellectual investigations into the affairs of
the individual within society. And, Adam Smith was acknowledged as
the master of this new discipline. There is, in fact, no arena in
the relations between man and nature, man and man, or between man
and the State, that he did not touch upon.
Smith is today repeatedly represented as the great defender of
laissez-faire capitalism by those who wish to protect
private contractual arrangements from interference by the State, in
part on the grounds that they are inherently voluntary and that
regulations or controls by the State are inherently coercive. From
this perspective, Smith's explorations into the operation of markets
and the definition of what laissez-faire means has been
substantially misrepresented. The Wealth Of Nations is both
a philosophical and an historical study of the ascent of man within
society. As all scientists strive to do, Smith attempted to show
cause and effect relationships while developing at the same time the
fundamental principles of his science, political economy. To the
great misfortune of mankind, division of political economy into
independent and specialized disciplines late in the nineteenth
century dealt a severe blow to the achievements of Smith and his
successors.
The promotion of what are presented as laissez-faire
approaches to public policy is an important example of just how far
we have drifted from the principles of political economy as
developed by Smith and his contemporaries in France, from whom the
full term, laissez-faire, laissez-aller, and the discussion
of its meaning arose. For much of the nineteenth century the full
doctrine remained obscure and unattended. Henry George made an
attempt in the late nineteenth century to resurrect a full
discussion of the principles underlying this doctrine and translated
the French into English as "[c]lear the ways and let things
alone."(26) From his reading of a wide range of tracts on
political economy, George concluded that the successors to Smith had
"emasculated and perverted" the doctrine from its
full and scientific importance. The essence of what the French
political economists were espousing, wrote George, was appropriately
described by the English phrase, "a fair field and no favor."
To clear the ways requires the removal of all privilege and
monopolistic licenses, the absence of which secures a fair field and
no favor. This is the key to competitive markets and is essential to
Smith's anti-mercantilist doctrine. Where human behavior is
concerned, one must ask how many entrepreneurs (a group that
includes both producers, servicers and speculators) have ever been
eager to assume the risks of markets free of privilege and subject
to often harsh competitive pressures? Smith, for one, and Henry
George as well, understood that whenever possible individuals and
groups would attempt to use their influence and the power of the
State to secure for themselves protectionist measures of enormous
benefit to themselves.
While the essence of scientific investigation is that of a
discipline driven by an objective quest for truth, the practice of
political economy (and its successor disciplines) has with
incredible consistency been subverted by vested interest and
prejudicial analysis. Even Smith proved susceptible to the pressures
of his position in eighteenth century British society and went to
great lengths to defend the privileges attached to landownership
under British constitutional law. Yet his influence over the
intellectual elite of North America was significant. In many
instances Smith could be used as an authority to support conclusions
they had come to based on their own reasoning and observations. In
this way, Smith's work became a standard against which others
conducted their own investigations by subjecting Smith's principles
to scientific scrutiny. In the political arena, Smith also found
important, if only partial, acceptance for his specific public
policy recommendations, so long as they could be implemented within
the constraints of existing socio-political arrangements and
institutions. Smith's nineteenth century successors, then, can be
credited with the introduction of incrementalism as the
pattern by which law and policies were altered to advance or thwart
various objectives. The issues of direct concern to this essay,
however, relate to Smith's exploration into the origin and expansion
of socio-political arrangements and institutions themselves,
particularly those that created property rights in nature by means
of titleholdings. Integral to an understanding of Smith's
conclusions is his conception of what constituted societal justice.
Chapter VIII of The Wealth Of Nations deals with "The
Wages Of Labour" and begins with an exceptionally
straightforward presentation of how groups evolve and adopt
hierarchical societal structures. After giving us this insight into
history, however, he applies a value judgment that had important
consequences for the advance of political economy as a scientific
endeavor. First, Smith as historian:
In that original state of things, which precedes both the
appropriation of land and the accumulation of stock, the whole
produce of labour belongs to the labourer. He has neither landlord
nor master to share with him.
Had this state continued, the wages of labour would have augmented
with all those improvements in its productive powers, to which the
division of labour gives occasion. All things would have gradually
become cheaper. They would have been produced by a smaller quantity
of labour; and as the commodities produced by equal quantities of
labour would naturally in this state of things be exchanged for one
another, they would have been purchased likewise with the produce of
a smaller quantity.(27)
What, one legitimately asks, could be more just than that the
wealth produced by one's own labor is and should be the private
property of the producer? That history had not so unfolded and that
titleholdings to nature granted and protected by societal
hierarchies had allowed the idle to confiscate wealth from the
producer was uncharacteristically glossed over by Smith. His
treatment of this circumstance suggests a reluctance to follow his
own reasoning to a logical conclusion. He was, of course, writing
about a subject that had unsettling ramifications for those who by
virtue of privilege had gained and held both political power and
material wealth:
But this original state of things, in which the labourer enjoyed
the whole produce of his own labour, could not last beyond the first
introduction of the appropriation of land and the accumulation of
stock. It was at an end, therefore, long before the most
considerable improvements were made in the productive powers of
labour, and it would be to no purpose to trace further what might
have been its effects upon the recompence of wages of labour.
As soon as land becomes private property, the landlord demands a
share of almost all the produce which the labourer can either raise,
or collect from it. His rent makes the first deduction from the
produce of the labour which is employed upon land.(28)
This "first deduction" of "rent"
stems from a power relationship existing between the producer and
the titleholder, backed to a greater or lesser degree by the police
power of the State, that both sanctions the private appropriation of
nature as the property of the individual while abrogating the
principle that the product of labor belongs to the laborer.
Political economy also takes note of the fact that nature has a
zero production cost in terms of human labor, meaning that the
existence of the earth in its natural state precedes and is
independent of the presence of mankind. The earth has been here to
facilitate our ascent from our first appearance, and access to
nature demands from individuals no inherent exchange of existing or
future production. In philosophical terms, the access to nature is
both essential to our survival and an equal birthright of all
individuals. Manmade socio-political arrangements and institutions
(normally imposed on the many by the few, but in the case of
existing social-democracies, incrementally acceded to under majority
rule) establish claims of sovereignty over particular portions of
the earth, protected by militarism, which is then distributed under
systems of positive law in the form of titleholdings, licenses and
other forms of unnatural and artificial property rights. A decade
before the appearance of The Wealth Of Nations, the French
political economist, Ann Robert Jacques Turgot, opened the door for
Smith and for writers driven by more egalitarian motives:
[T]he land filled up, and was more and more cleared. The best
lands at length came to be all occupied. There remained for the last
comers only the sterile soils rejected by the first. But in the end
all land found its master, and those who could not have properties
had at first no other resource than that of exchanging the labour of
their arms, in the employments of the "stipendiary" class,
for the superfluous portion of the crops of the cultivating
Proprietor.(29)
Smith is aware of this anomaly, and in Chapter I of Book V he
makes an attempt to rationalize these historical developments:
Among nations of hunters, as there is scarce any property ... so
there is seldom any established magistrate or any regular
administration of justice. Men who have no property can injure one
another only in their persons or reputations. ...It is otherwise
with the injuries to property. The benefit of the person who does
the injury is often equal to the loss of him who suffers it. ... But
avarice and ambition in the rich, in the poor the hatred of labour
and the love of present ease and enjoyment, are the passions which
prompt to invade property, passions much more steady in their
operation, and much more universal in their influence. ... It is
only under the shelter of the civil magistrate [i.e., the State]
that the owner of that valuable property, which [and here is where
Smith fails in the consistency of his logic by ignoring history] is
acquired by the labour of many years, or perhaps of many successive
generations, can sleep a single night in security. He is at all
times surrounded by unknown enemies, whom, though he never provoked,
he can never appease, and from whose injustice he can be protected
only by the powerful arm of the civil magistrate continually held up
to chastise it.(30)
In what can only be described as Smith's greatest contradiction of
principle, he begins with a natural rights definition of property
as the wealth returned to those who apply their labor to nature
(i.e., which, in political economy, was given the one identifying
term of land). He then goes on to defend the redistribution
of property from its legitimate owners, the producers, to
non-producers, those who merely have gained titleholdings to land.
That the control of land had been repeatedly gained either by
warfare or other means of displacing existing occupants was not
merely ignored by Smith; his position strongly supported the view
that mere possession of a titleholding was a form of labor. What,
then, of the great landed estates that by loyalty to a given monarch
had come into existence by edict, or the enclosure of the commons
that displaced communitarian use with private control, or the
division of Ireland by Oliver Cromwell among his generals as the
spoils of victory? Smith merely indicts the landless poor for their
"hatred of labour" without acknowledging the
misery and oppression under which they live and with which absentee
landlords or despots confiscated as rent an ever greater
portion of what labor was able to produce. What, Smith might have
asked, is the effect on the productiveness of labor when nearly all
that one's labor yields is confiscated by others? One is directly to
conclude that Smith was either guilty of intellectual dishonesty or
a remarkable lapse in his ability to use his own scientific
reasoning.
Other than Smith we have the doctrines of John Locke to guide us,
although Locke is not widely credited by posterity for his own work
in political economy. As a socio-political philosopher, however, he
gave considerable attention to many of the same intellectual
questions as did Smith; equally important, he wrote very much in the
spirit of an antagonist and against the status quo. His work was
certainly instructive for Smith and other eighteenth century
political economists and remains so today. From Locke we are
provided with two fundamental cornerstones of a human rights
doctrine. In the first instance, he writes:
God hath given the world to men in common... Yet every man has a
property in his own person. The labor of his body and the work of
his hands are properly his. ...(31)
Of the relationship between man and nature and justice, Locke
holds that "[a]s much land as a man tills, plants,
improves, cultivates, and can use the produce of, so much is his
property."(32) This is far different from Smith's strained
effort to attach to Britain's (and other States) systems of land
tenure that provided a privileged few with vast and unused or
underutilized estates at the expense of displaced majorities.
A practical attempt to incorporate Locke's principles of land
tenure had already been advanced by William Penn in North America
under his original plan for the settlement of land granted
to him by England's sovereign king. In a document written by Penn in
1681, he required that "[e]very man shall be bound to
plant, or man, his land within three years after survey, or else
other applicants may be settled thereon."(33) By design,
only those who actually took occupancy and produced wealth on the
land would have their titleholding sanctioned. Penn also went
considerably beyond Locke in suggesting that titleholdings should be
equated to a leasehold granted by society and, therefore, carried an
obligation by society to collect the rental value of land for public
expenditures. As proposed by Penn, this measure promised a
remarkable result:
If all men were so far tenants to the public that the
superfluities of gain and expense were applied to the exigencies
thereof, it would put an end to taxes, leave not a beggar, and make
the greatest bank for national trade in Europe.(34)
Penn's vision of a society built on the above arrangements and
institutions was either unknown to Smith or dispatched because of
the direct threat Penn's ideas had on entrenched privilege. The
torch ignited by Penn was to receive attention in a serious way
among the American revolutionaries only from Thomas Paine,
and only after the Constitution had been adopted by the States. By
then, the time had passed when the interests of the people as a
whole, and the interests of future generations, might have
overturned all the evils of land tenure as practiced in the Old
World and carried into the New. Sounding very much like Penn, Paine
had written in 1795:
Man did not make the earth, and, though he had a natural right to
occupy it he had no right to locate as his property in perpetuity
any part of it; neither did the Creator of the earth open a land
office, from whence title deeds should issue. ...it is the value of
the improvement only, and not the earth itself that is individual
property.(35)
And, as had William Penn and as would Henry George, Paine declared
that justice required that "[e]very propriety of cultivated
land owes to the community a ground rent ... for the land which he
holds; and it is from this ground rent that the fund"(36)
for Paine's system of social welfare was to come. Paine reasoned
that "improvements" derived from the labor of
individuals (assisted by the use of physical capital also produced
by labor) represented natural property to the individual. The
payment of "ground rents" by the individual to
society was, on the other hand, just compensation to society for the
privilege of sole access and protection of whatever natural property
accrued to one's labor.
With some degree of certainly, one can conclude that had Thomas
Jefferson rather than Tom Paine advanced this plan for the
collection of ground rent, its incorporation into the Constitution
and system of law would have been given serious consideration.
Unfortunately, Tom Paine made the very great tactical error of
publishing his deistic religious convictions in The Age Of
Reason, a work that advocated freedom of conscience far beyond
what the overwhelming majority of people anywhere could accept.
Paine was in this and other respects far ahead of conventional
wisdom. Although he returned to the United States during Jefferson's
rise to power, his influence on Jefferson and on the republican
elite disappeared. Jefferson had supported a measure that would have
permitted the federal government to levy a land tax to be collected
by the States; however, the proposal never made it to the floor at
the Constitutional convention. At an earlier time, when the
sentiments of the nation were, as Jefferson suggested, more deeply
impressed upon the founding fathers than on the framers of the
Constitution, the States provided under Article VIII of their
Articles of Confederation that:
All charges of war, and all other expenses that shall be incurred
for the common defence or general welfare, and allowed by the united
states in congress assembled, shall be defrayed out of a common
treasury, which shall be supplied by the several states in
proportion to the value of all land within each state. ...
Jefferson's own notes indicate that the substance of this Article
was advanced by New Jersey's delegate, Dr. John Witherspoon.
Witherspoon, writes Jefferson, "was of the opinion that the
value of lands and houses was the best estimate of the wealth of a
nation, and that it was practicable to obtain such a valuation."(37)
The illustrious doctor was on the right track, but his instincts
were not, apparently, supported by a learned appreciation of the
principles of political economy or he would have recognized the
taxation of the value of houses as a form of confiscation by the
State of wealth. Yet at the time those who owned large and valuable
houses were also generally those who had acquired their personal
fortunes by not having to contribute the rental value of their
landed estates to the common treasury. Passage of the Constitution
without provision for collecting economic rent proved Benjamin
Franklin correct in his assertion that the landed would tirelessly
and forcefully resist this measure.
One important ally to the interests of the landed in nineteenth
century America was a popular sense that the extent of land
available for the taking was unbounded. For several generations of
migrants and new arrivals from the Old World the North American
continent offered as much hope as real opportunity. Few asked what
conditions would arise once the continent was fully settled and the
ownership of land wholly under the control of government and private
interests. As is often the case, the most objective conclusions are
reached by distant observers. After a rather extensive tour of the
United States in the 1830s, the French official Alexis De
Tocqueville recorded that:
In America there are properly speaking, no farming tenants; every
man owns the ground he tills. It must be admitted that democratic
laws tend greatly to increase the number of landowners and to
diminish that of farming tenants. Yet what takes place in the United
States is much less attributable to the institutions of the country
than to the country itself. In America land is cheap and anyone may
easily become a landowner; its returns are small and its produce
cannot well be divided between a landowner and a farmer.(38)
Between the time when Paine attempted to attract public attention
to questions of agrarian justice and concerns with questions of land
reform by Marxists and Socialists, the American journalist
and activist Henry George resurrected Paine's populist campaign. By
temperament and personal experience, George proved to be more than
capable of carrying the torch. On the one hand he made an
extraordinary effort to substantiate his instincts with scientific
reasoning and observation. Self-taught and often in conflict with
university-trained professors, George became known as the last of
the Smithian line of classical political economists. At the
same time thousands of reform-minded individuals responded to his
message and elevated him to the head of a global political movement.
He also became one of history's great public speakers.
As the nineteenth century's revolution in technology turned
Britain, the United States, and much of Northern Europe into
industrial empires, mercantilism was vigorously attacked by
individualists who clamored for free trade and what they
construed to be laissez-faire policies on the part of
government toward business activity. Others demanded protective
tariffs against foreign goods and the freedom at home to form
monopolistic trusts in finance, transportation, manufacturing and
the extractive industries. In this environment, Henry George emerged
from California in the 1880s to champion the causes of agrarian
justice and free trade in a manner that struck anew at privilege in
all its forms as the enemy of liberty and republican virtue. George
conveyed in powerful terms to Americans, and others, that
the democratic revolution had faltered, and he told people in
specific terms what yet had to be done:
Free trade means free production. Now fully to free production it
is necessary not only to remove all taxes on production, but also to
remove all other restrictions on production. True free trade, in
short, requires that the active factor of production, Labor, shall
have free access to the passive factor of production, Land. To
secure this all monopoly of land must be broken up, and the equal
right of all to the use of the natural elements must be secured by
the treatment of the land as the common property in usufruct of the
whole people.(39)
His choice of words was important to Americans familiar with
republican rhetoric; Jefferson had used virtually the same language
in declaring that the land belonged to no single generation. After
almost two decades of writing, lecturing and campaigning, the
movement centered around Henry George had become world-wide,
although the advances he made to the scientific study of political
economy were largely ignored by the new generation of social
scientists. After his death in 1897 the torch he carried gradually
fell to the ground where it rested, until the last decade or so, as
a burning ember in danger of going out altogether.
Today there is a growing realization that our system of land
tenure has its roots in the same body of property law that produced
a still-existing privileged class of landowners in Britain. The
enlightened efforts of some of our founding fathers were able to
remove only a part of that system. Just socio-political arrangements
in our own republic will remain an elusive goal until we go all the
way to remedy the remaining structural defects. Labor and capital
must be freed to produce. Access to nature must be maximized. And
the economic value of nature must be collected in full to provide
for the public and private goods that contribute to a human
existence characterized by dignity.
We have over the last two centuries become more productive, more
adept at producing more from less. As a result, although the modern
landowner (often a corporation or other form of industrial-landlord)
commands a very large portion of production as rent, or escapes
paying rent to society as a titleholder, a large number of people in
our society do live reasonably well. As the concentration of
ownership continues to increase, however, we face the challenge of
having to make tremendous gains in productivity just to maintain our
current standard of well-being. The losses in permanent employment
or above-subsistence income by so many Americans of all ethnic
backgrounds during the last decade is a clear indication of the
consequences of failing to socialize the value of nature. Just think
of how different things would be had our forefathers listened to
William Penn, or Tom Paine, or Henry George. Justice, is not yet
secured.
FOOTNOTES:
(1) Author's Note: Of some
importance, both philosophically and historically is the use of
initial capital letters when referring to the (European-) American
society of this period. The citizens and political leaders within each
sovereign State generally thought of the national Constitution and
government as subordinate to the will of the States. Capitalization of
important words was ingrained in the use of English; however, on the
basis of original intent a more appropriate representation would be "the
States united" or, as sometimes appears in the literature of
the era, "the Union."
(2) Mortimer J. Adler. Common Sense of Politics (New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971), p.125.
(3) Ibid., pp.122-123.
(4) Ibid., p.123.
(5) Ibid., pp.125-126.
(6) Ibid., p.128.
(7) Henry George. Progress And Poverty (New York:
Robert Schalkenbach Foundation edition, 1975. Originally published
1879), p.530.
(8) John Locke. Two Treatises Of Government (New
York: Hafner Publishing Company edition, 1947. Originally published
1690), pp.222-223.
(9) Bernard Bailyn. The Ideological Origins Of The American
Revolution (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1967),
p.27.
(10) Allan W. Eckert. Wilderness Empire (Boston:
Little, Brown and Company, 1969), p.296.
(11) Ibid.
(12) John C. Miller. Origins Of The American Revolution
(Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1943), p.212.
(13) Ibid., pp.213-214.
(14) Charles M. Andrews. The Colonial Background Of The
American Revolution (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1924),
p.41.
(15) Kingsley Martin. The Rise Of French Liberal Thought
(New York: New York University Press edition, 1954. Originally
published 1929), p.18.
(16) Oscar T. Barck, Jr. and Hugh T. Lefler. Colonial America
(New York: The Macmillan Company, 19xx), p.640.
(17) Bernard Bailyn. The Ideological Origins Of The American
Revolution, p.231.
(18) Author's Note: Jefferson's activities and positions on the
issues of the day support this conclusion. His efforts to end slavery,
dissolve the laws of primogeniture and entail, his efforts to secure
popular education and an end to the ties between Church and State
place him at the vanguard of the radical reform republicans.
(19) Homer Carey Hockett. The Constitutional History Of The
United States, Vol.I (New York: Macmillan Co., 1939), p.256.
(20) Thomas Jefferson. Notes On The State Of Virginia
(1781), p.161. Quoted in: Fawn M. Brodie. Thomas Jefferson
(New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1974), p.156.
(21) From a letter to Robert J. Garnett, February 14, 1824. Reprinted
in: The Political Writings Of Thomas Jefferson, edited
by Edward Dumbauld (Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1955),
p.125.
(22) Jackson Turner Main. The Social Structure Of
Revolutionary America (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press, 1965), p.275.
(23) Ibid., p.287.
(24) Author's Note: A report issued in August of 1989 by the Joint
Economic Committee of Congress indicates that the top 0.5% of American
families holds 26.9% of the nation's household wealth. According to a
Town & Country report, "The Land: Who Owns America?"
(May 1983), "more and more land is passing into the hands of
fewer and fewer people" and that "3 percent of the
population own 55 percent of the total land, and a full 95 percent of
the 1.3 billion acres of privately owned land in this country."
(25) Drew R. McCoy. The Elusive Republic (New York:
W.W. Norton & Company, 1980), p.17.
(26) Henry George. The Science Of Political Economy
(New York: Robert Schalkenbach Foundation edition, 1968. Originally
published 1897), p.153.
(27) Adam Smith. The Wealth Of Nations (New York:
Random House edition, 1937. Originally published 1776), p.64.
(28) Ibid., p.65.
(29) Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, "Reflections on the Formation
and Distribution of Wealth." (1766) Reprinted in: Masterworks
Of Economics, Vol.I (New York: McGraw Hill Book Company,
1973), pp.38.39.
(30) Ibid., p.670.
(31) John Locke. Two Treatises Of Government (New
York: Hafner Publishing Company edition, 1947. Originally published
1690), p.134.
(32) Ibid., p.136.
(33) From the pamphlet "Certain Conditions and Concessions
agreed upon by William Penn and Adventurers and Purchasers,"
dated July 11, 1681. Quoted in: Alfred N. Chandler. Land Title
Origins (New York: Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, 1945),
p.402.
(34) From the pamphlet "Fruits of Solitude," Part II
(1693). Quoted in: The Single Tax Yearbook, edited by
Joseph D. Miller (New York: Single Tax Review Publishing Company,
1917), p.314.
(35) Thomas Paine, "Agrarian Justice." (1795) Quoted in:
Single Tax Yearbook, pp.329-330.
(36) Ibid.
(37) From Jefferson's notes on "The Confederation."
Reprinted in: Great Debates In American History,
Vol.I, edited by Marion M. Miller (New York: Current Literature
Publishing Co., 1913), p.242.
(38) Alexis de Tocqueville. Democracy In America (New
York: Vintage Books edition, 1954. Originally published in two parts,
1835 and 1840), p.196.
(39) Henry George. Protection Or Free Trade (New
York: Henry George & Co., 1886), p.309.