Many
voters, with good cause, doubt politicians' ability to deliver on
“free housing”. But in my opinion, that's because many voters are
largely unaware of the true purpose of a free-market system.
Decreasing
and limiting the size and scope of government, simplifying the tax
code, letting people keep more of their own money, and letting
technology do its thing, could all help result in cheaper housing,
and in more people getting housed. Making low-cost housing possible
through voluntary and free-market means, instead of through the
government, could help make people more free, while their rent goes
down at the same time.
Promoting multi-use zoning, for example, could help make it easier
for people to work from home, or work closer to home. Land Value
Taxation, rooftop reclamation, and building upwards, would all help
to make land and housing less expensive, while also reducing urban
sprawl, diminishing the influence of speculation on the land and
housing markets, and leading to fewer unused parcels and fewer
abandoned properties.
Another
thing that would help reduce the cost of housing, is to reduce the
cost of land, in hopes that that would decrease the costs of
building on land. It would also help to get the government out
of all the lands out West that it owns or manages without explicit
constitutional authority. There is no reason why progressives and
conservatives shouldn't unite against large land and energy
monopolies, especially considering that conservatism and
environmental conservation have a long history of going hand-in-hand.
I
recommend that the single national Environmental Protection Agency be
replaced with Community Land Trusts, and community trusts that
protect air, water, and other natural resources (these trusts are one
of the potential features of implementing Henry George's Land Value
Taxation).
Right
now, we're seeing Donald Trump's E.P.A. make the exact same move that
George W. Bush's E.P.A. made in the early 2000s; a move against
California's ability to determine its vehicle emissions standards.
This is an example of how government control of an industry with the
purpose of protecting consumers, can easily cause that industry to
become victim to regulatory capture, because the people assume that a
good or service will be safe simply because there is an agency that
exists which is supposed to regulate it (whether it does so or
not).
I
strongly believe that it is better for many federal agencies to be
abolished, than to continue existing and risk being used for
evil. Don't be ashamed to cite California's 10th Amendment
“states' rights” to legislate on vehicle emissions, something
that's not mentioned in the Enumerated Powers, and which is thus none
of Congress's business. But back to land and housing.
Housing is not free; but that's not primarily the fault of markets or voluntary exchange. Certainly it's because of capitalism, an also bad government, but not markets.
It's
because of land and mortgage speculation (which is capitalism, but
with government protection). It's also because of bad legislation;
such as 1) housing codes that favor flammable building materials
(i.e., wood, instead of concrete and rock); 2) restrictions on
architectural experimentation (look up Mike Reynolds and “Earth
ships”); 3) subsidies to live in flood-prone areas, and loads of
additional unnecessary measures that only make housing more expensive
and more likely to be damaged.
The
best-case scenario of addressing these problems, is that we could we
drastically undermine the financial and lobbying power of the “FIRE
economy” (Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate industries). Simply
put – and speaking of fire - a home that isn't made of flammable
materials (i.e., wood) doesn't have much use for fire
insurance. Building more buildings out of glass, steel, concrete, and
rock – including building into the rock naturally – could
help reduce house fires, and drastically reduce the need to purchase
fire insurance. And that means savings for struggling families.
Markets
aren't even supposed to exist for
things which exist in abundance, like housing. Abundant goods exist
in greater supply than is necessary to satisfy people's needs. People
assume that land existing in a fixed supply, means that not enough of
it exists.
But
of course enough of it
exists; we're not falling off the planet, and less than 3% of land
area is used for housing. So logically – according to
free market principles of supply and demand;
namely, that an abundant supply should mean not just low prices, but
zero cost – housing
should be free, because there's so much of it that it's a free gift
from nature.
But
like idiots, we fence it off, evict whoever's on it, exclude everyone
from it who refuses to pay us for access to it, sell it off piece by
piece, and let governments and large companies own huge amounts of
it, and even destroy it with no financial or legal repercussions nor
compensation to the community.
You
can learn more about mass eviction by looking up the enclosure of the
English Commons, also known as the enclosure movement. Mass
displacements of Native Americans, such as the Trail of Tears,
parallel these mass displacements from land, as do similar events in
other countries throughout time.
This
is the macroscopic explanation of why rent is theft; because what's
being rented and leased is stolen, conquered property, which was not
acquired justly. Whether it was acquired according to the letter of
the law should matter much, much less than whether it was acquired
without violating anyone's right to be free from other people's
violence, aggression, and coercion.
That
is why “rent is theft”. While the Libertarian Party believes
that “taxation is theft”, we at the Libertarian Socialist Caucus
of the LP also believe that “rent is theft”.
Rent
is theft for the same reason that eviction is murder; they're both
coercive, exploitative practices which are likely to result in the
death and deprivation of the borrower or renter, who for all intents
and purposes has been legally and logistically precluded from doing
anything to make ends meet other than those methods which have been
culturally normalized and authoritatively approved (i.e., selling his
labor and renting his living space). Homesteading, foraging, mutual
aid, charity, and gift/trade/barter/share combined, do not always
supplement what we procure for ourselves through legitimized business
and political avenues.
Additionally,
we agree with Proudhon that “property is theft”, and that
“property is impossible”.
Basically,
this is to say that one can't own a huge chunk of land; at least not
without the government's recognition and help and police assistance,
because otherwise, people would steal it from them. Call it
“stealing”, or “seizing”, or even just “challenging” them
for it. A person defending a property claim based purely on defense
and conquest, cannot logically refuse someone's offer to fight him
for his property, if those are the terms upon which he voluntarily
chooses to wager that his property claim is valid.
“Absentee
ownership” is a scourge against which Georgists, Mutualists,
anarchists, socialists, and communists all
fight; it is the ownership is a property by an owner who rarely makes
use of or even visits his claimed property (especially one who does
little to no work to maintain or defend the property). The
Libertarian Socialist Caucus of the L.P. fully supports the right to
squat, as long as the squatters do not make the place unlivable or
let it fall into further disrepair. Usufructory (use-based) property
rights are not a defense when it is conquered
land which is being “used better” or “used more
productively”.
The idea that poor people don't pay taxes is ridiculous, for the simple reason that there are sales taxes in 46 states. There's no reason that a homeless person should have to pay sales taxes on everything he eats.
The idea that poor people don't pay taxes is ridiculous, for the simple reason that there are sales taxes in 46 states. There's no reason that a homeless person should have to pay sales taxes on everything he eats.
There's
also no reason why people should need to hire a lobbyist to
stop their tax money from going to fund police forces, and license
private security guards, and protect the six empty residences that
exist for every homeless person in America, and prop-up and bail-out
businesses that they want to fully boycott but can't.
Socialists and free-marketers both believe in boycott, but for all
intents and purposes, boycotts are illegal. Not just because our tax
money goes to corporate welfare, but also because secondary
boycotts are illegal according to federal law (the Taft-Hartley
Act), even though they would have no reason to be illegal in a
libertarian society because they are perfectly voluntary.
Aside
from taxes and corporate subsidies, and the impossibility of boycott,
the idea that poor people don't pay taxes is also laughable
because of the “opportunity costs” that people lose; when they
are ordered to obey this or that policy, ordered to submit to this or
that authority figure or politician, or ordered to buy this or that
product. The lives of soldiers are being paid around the world to
finance the destruction we are causing; and the value of those lives
lost are impossible to measure. Opportunity costs are an unseen tax,
and so is inflation, which Ron Paul called a tax on saving money.
Human
beings can't help but take up space and area on the planet. Each of
us has the natural right to homestead property to make it livable,
and bequeath it to our children, and any government that deprives us
of that right should at least compensate us.
Conservative
hero Thomas Paine proposed that each adult be paid a fixed sum of
thousands per year; as a share in the land value, and as compensation
for those deprivations of rights to freely homestead, inherit, and
bequeath. However, some of Paine's own modern-day conservative
admirers might call him a Universal Basic Income Guarantee
-supporting “socialist” for espousing such a position. The same
with John Locke, who said people have to leave enough land for
others, so they have a place to live.
Some
say that the poor don't deserve a basic income, nor a citizens'
dividend, nor even any food or jobs guarantee. No free identification
documents either. Many of them say that the poor shouldn't receive
any government services, unless they pay for them, i.e.,
through user fees. This is predicated upon the idea that only
property owners should vote, and that therefore poor people who have
no property should not vote, nor receive government services.
However, to say this is to admit that even if homeless people have a
few possessions, they have no property. Which is to say that there is
a distinction; a distinction which anarcho-capitalists insist is not
useful, so therefore they do not make it.
Socialists
do not “hate” private property, and they do not want to “steal
your toothbrush”. Anyone who is trying to convince you that
socialists want your toothbrush because it's private property, does
not know what socialists mean when they say private property.
A
personal possession is any ordinary, small, cheap, mass-produced,
easily movable thing; anything that isn't an important, rare tool, or
something is not essential to the labor process, or wouldn't make
sense to be cooperatively managed by a large group of workers, or
something that people don't actually need
in order to survive or earn a living. The latter are examples of
private property.
“Private
property” (as people like Marx and Proudhon used it) does not
include personal possessions; only private property in the
means of production, like
factories and plants, large machine parts, farms, and land. It
includes things that are loaned out at interest; and the laborer's
wage is taken as profit (and the laborer underpaid) as a form of
“rent” on the means of production which the worker is borrowing
for eight hours a day in order to avoid starvation. Which he does by
paying an additional rent to a landlord who holds a title granted by
government, which right-libertarians are foolish enough to fail to
describe as anything but another ordinary law.
Sucks
to the law.
Written on July 4th, 20th, 26th, and 27th, and August 1st through 4th, and 6th, 2018
Edited and Expanded on August 20th, 2018
Originally Published on August 20th, 2018
No comments:
Post a Comment