This responds to James' comments, reproduced below.
By selective quotes you can make out George to have been a libertarian, or a
socialist, because he was a bit of each. He summed it up once: "I can no
more refer to myself as a socialist or a free-marketer than an astronomer,
explaining how planets revolve around the sun, can call himself a
centrifugalist or a centripetalist." That is the essential George, which
critics of either extreme have difficulty even conceiving, let alone
accepting. They (not necessarily James) are perhaps trapped in a
one-dimensional paradigm, Left vs. Right.
Some latter-day Georgists, also affected by one-dimensional thinking, split
into two camps, Left and Right. Allied with libertarians are or were Frank
Chodorov, Albert J. Nock, Jack Schwartzman, and others. Allied with
socialists are or were Norman Thomas, Carey McWilliams, Upton Sinclair, and
others. Many others, like the good astronomer, hew to the balance of
forces. It's hard to escape from the constant bombardment of unilateral
thinking. Yet that is what we must do, to be good economists.
Remember, also, that George evolved over time. After 1886 he split with his
socialist allies - at least the more doctrinaire, intolerant ones he knew in
New York City. Folks at the von Mises Inst. find little to fault in
George's Protection or Free Trade, written to support Grover Cleveland
(although it was a bit overboard for the cautious Grover). After the bust
of 1893 George rediscovered some of his earlier radicalism and lined up
first with the Populists, and then with Bryan, Altgeld, Tom Johnson, and
other radicalized Democrats. He stayed in tune with the temper of the
times, for he was always a political activist. You may praise him or fault
him for "weathervaning", but that was George. Many of his political
associates expressed irritation at his constancy, as he never lost view of
his basic goal of reforming taxation.
Hope the above helps modern readers understand George.
Mason Gaffney
Below is what James wrote:
Delighted to see Mason Gaffney re-enter the discussion. Since his
scolding of me for having referred to Marxian analysis, I've read from
Henry George the intent for arguing the single-tax proposal. George's
goal is "to unite the truth perceived by the school of Smith and Ricardo
to the truth perceived by the schools of Proudhon and Lassalle; to show
that laissez faire (in its full true meaning) opens the way to a
realization of the noble dreams of socialism" (4th ed., p. xxi). (Note
that Proudhon considers private property to be theft.) And like Marx
who argued that all value derives from labor and not giving labor all of
production amounts to exploitation, George argues that "private property
in land always has, and always must, as development proceeds, lead to
the enslavement of the laboring class" (p. xx). It is from such
reasoning that George sought to dispute the wages-fund explanation of
wage rate determination and also denied the classical inverse
wage-profit relation argument in chapter 1 of his book.
Most mothers, I'm inclined to believe, tell their children to watch the
company they keep. Perhaps Mason and most advocates of land-rent tax
just want to argue to motivating aspect of taxing land so its holders
put them to their highest net income-earning uses. But I think people
who refer to themselves as Georgists must also bear in mind that Henry
George had the goal of establishing socialism with his single-tax
proposal. I wish they would not get overly excited when that motivation
is brought up.
James Ahiakpor
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