-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Gurstein
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2011 5:10 PM
To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'
Subject: [Futurework] Rich in China want to emigrate

 

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2077139,00.html

 

_______________________________________________

 

>From an article I wrote for Futurework which was copied to the New School
Library and then to several other sites and settled back to this Georgist
Website.  Shows what we were talking about on this list fourteen or so years
ago and how the wheel is always turning.     We say the cycles are 52 years
and Wall Street says 57.    But either way it's still a wheel and China is
not immune. 

 

REH

 

 


The Influence of Henry George
on the Cherokee Nation

 


Ray E. Harrell

 


[Reprinted from Land-Theory, 31 December 1998]

 

This particular Georgist (Casper Davis) finally answered a question that I
posed on this list (Futurework) a couple of years ago to one of his
colleagues from California. In the 1880s the politician Henry Dawes visited
the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma where there was no poverty and more than a
little wealth as well as universal education, health care and suffrage. Not
a person was in debt and everyone owned their own house. More than a few
were mansions and some were millionaires, today they would be considerably
more than millionaires. All of this in a population of under 50,000 people. 

Dawes reported back to Washington that they were followers of Henry George
and would never progress further until the "common" was broken up and "every
person learned the virtue of selfishness" which Dawes considered to be the
root of all human progress. Ten years later the federal government used
Dawes' report not only to justify breaking up the Cherokee lands but to
dispossess all indigenous nations of their lands and self government. They
created the state of Oklahoma and after giving a pittance to each Indian
citizen they dispersed the rest in a land rush to the local European
immigrants. After the state of Oklahoma was formed it was the Cherokee
Lawyers who formed the Oklahoma Bar Association and not the immigrants the
same was true for the medical doctors, teachers and the State's Baptist
Newspaper which all came from the then defunct Cherokee nation and culture. 

I asked two years ago how we (my Cherokee ancestors) were followers of Henry
George, and today Casper explained it. I would say that Henry George was
"following" us considering that our structure was older but nonetheless it
did seem to be the same. Dawes was at least right about that. I did not
realize how hostile American Society was to George in the 1890s. 

I would suggest that it might behoove economist Angell to study the Cherokee
Nation from 1846 to the Congressional Curtis Dissolution Act in the 1890s to
understand why the TNCs and Information Revolution are such delicate
affairs. It is the foreign policy of governments that has destroyed the best
ideals of Utopian thought and schemes. Companies do not have that
possibility even when they have yearly budgets that far exceed the budgets
of most world governments. Indeed China has a limited GDP but its land and
people mass could obliterate Bill Gates and friends small universe if they
were placed in competition without outside governmental help going to Gates.


Would the Soviet Union have collapsed if it had not had a virtual embargo by
the West for almost the entire seventy years of its existence? How about
Cuba? We have not had a fair competition with any of the Communist systems
compared to the Capitalists without government embargo and military
pressures applied on both sides thus far. 

There is very little that was practiced by any of the communist countries
that was not practiced by this country in its first seventy years of
existence. Would the U.S. have collapsed on itself if it had not committed
genocide for its frontier expansion and had first an owned work force of
human slaves from 1776 to 1860 and then an oppressing apartheid policy to
protect the European minority in the South from 1865 to 1954? 

Would the South have been America's Chechniya (sp?) with legislatures
elected by the Black majority across the South that were hostile and thus
drove the Europeans both North and West? Would these reverse carpetbaggers
have created a hostile underclass that would have devoured the democracy
from within its white ranks and created the kind of cynical laissez faire
attitude that is prevalent in Russia today but without the cultural glue
thus driving the wealthy back to Europe from whence they came? 

Well, just some thoughts on these last few hours of 1998. I would suggest
that another traditional process might be in order for many of the problems
that have been discussed thus far on this list. Recently there has been a
revival of religious programming in the U.S. with even the medical
profession suggesting that prayer, even from a distance, can heal people who
are connected to each other. 

Being both a pagan and a priest, this might seem strange to some that I
would suggest a possible answer within such a thought but nonetheless I am
offering the thought. It is said that meditation is the highest form of
prayer amongst my people. I would suggest a meditation on the balance of
things for this new year. Meditate on your neighbors, not from the
standpoint of conversion to your way of thought, but with the idea that a
healthy neighbor is less likely to be a destructive one. If you pray for the
balance of human societies, the health of their children and the development
of their potential as humans, and then you do the same for the rest of life
on the earth and the earth itself, then at least within yourself you will
grow more aware. And who knows what will happen if we all grow more aware
and less anesthetized by both the pace and demands of the world that we have
decided to dream into place up until the present? Happy New Year! 

Ray Evans Harrell 

 

Caspar Davis wrote:

This article gives a good description of the growing gap between the rich
and poor, and of the shrinking middle class. 

I was taught and firmly believe that the health of a society is indicated
most clearly by the size and well being of the middle group. After the
second world war, there were almost 30 years of unprecedented prosperity
during which the wealth (at least in the "developed" nations) was
distributed more equally than at almost any time since tribal times. Since
1972, that trend has reversed. GDP, which measures economic activity
regardless of its environmental or social consequences, counting the money
spent on cancer treatment, oil spill clean up, divorce courts and prisons in
just the same way as it counts the money spent on education or food, has
continued to increase, but almost every other measure of well-being has
declined, and the social consequences are very palpable. 

The author asks, "What is the relationship between equity and economic
growth?" This is the central question asked by Henry George 120 years ago in
Progress and Poverty. His answer was that all livelihood ultimately depended
upon access to land (in which he included all natural resources, and ALSO
such things as government-created monopolies (i.e. things like salt in
Gandhi's India, taxi cab licences, radio and TV licences, and all patents).
Where those resources, which were provided by nature as commons for the good
of all, are held in a few hands, the holders of them can and do claim all
the value of both labour AND capital, leaving the labourer or ordinary
businessperson no more than they need for elementary subsistence. George's
answer was for society to charge those who benefitted from the exclusive use
of land or any other part of the commons the full economic rent therefore,
and to distribute the rent equally to all so that all might benefit. 

Since George's time, the enclosure of the commons has gone on apace. The
electromagnetic spectrum has been given free of charge to the holders of TV
and radio licences; patent laws have been dramatically strengthened, and
lately even life forms and genetic material have been privatized for private
profit. Government funding, paid by the taxes of all, has been diverted from
the needy to profitable corporations,either to help them become "more
competitive" or often as outright bribes to induce them to locate facilities
within or not to take facilities away from a particular jurisdiction. As
Time magazine recently showed, they often take the (public) money and run.
Therefore government revenues must be included in the modern definition of
"land", as must the ability of the earth, air and watrer to absorb and
neutralize pollutants. 

I have sent for the full report to see what the author's prescription is. I
believe that Henry George's solution is still the best that I have seen, but
whether I am right or not, it is clear that the Neo-Liberal "trickle down"
theory results only in the sucking up and retention of wealth by those at
the top. 

Caspar Davis

 

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