So you don't go along with the saying "behind every great fortune is a great
crime..."

-----Original Message-----
From: Harry Pollard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, May 30, 2003 1:22 PM
To: Ed Weick; Ray Evans Harrell; Cordell, Arthur: ECOM;
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Fw: Reality Internet


Ed,

The problem is that most Basic Income ideas want to take from the rich and 
give to the poor. As I said, if the rich earned it, we have no right to 
their earnings. If they are rich because the government gave them a 
lucrative privilege, the privilege should be removed.

It shouldn't be supported and then taxed. That's ridiculous.

As you know, Rent (in the Classical sense) is a creation of the community 
that finds its way into private hands. If it were to be collected and given 
back to the community that created it, not only would it make sense, it 
would be the moral thing to do.

Some Georgists place this "Citizen's Dividend" high on their agenda.

All figures are highly suspect and my arithmetic is more so. There is a 
total land value in the US of about $30 trillion. At 5% we can capitalize 
down to an annual income of $1.5 trillion - to be divided among (say) 300 
million Americans.

That would seem to work out at about $5,000 for every man, woman, and 
child. Let's halve it for much of it is land speculation. So, a nuclear 
family of four would get $10,000 Citizen's Dividend - without taking a 
penny from the people who earned their wealth.

Yet, this isn't so important. What is important is to stop the hemorrhaging 
from the economy caused by heavy speculation in the basic source of all our 
production.

Harry

----------------------------------------------

Ed wrote:

>Ray, surely the idea is not to redistribute everything.  Surely all that is
>needed is some form of redistribution that ensures that everyone in a
>society has enough to live on if they happen to lose their jobs or are
>unable to work for some other reason.  Unlike welfare, it should be
>something that is so integral to society that no one could be labeled or
>stigmatized because they make use of it.  If it existed, we wouldn't need
>things like welfare, disability payments, or employment insurance.  On the
>part of society, the operating moral principle would be that every citizen
>is entitled to it.  On the part of the citizen, the operating moral
>principle would be to use it only when one had to.  Some people would have
>to use it permanently, but hopefully most only temporarily.  It's like the
>basic income proposals Sally Lerner used to promote on this list.
>
>Ed Weick



****************************************************
Harry Pollard
Henry George School of Social Science of Los Angeles
Box 655   Tujunga   CA   91042
Tel: (818) 352-4141  --  Fax: (818) 353-2242
http://home.attbi.com/~haledward
****************************************************

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