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Bonus Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 47 of the 1991 Robert Schalkenbach Foundation edition of Henry George‘s 1886 volume, Protection or Free Trade (emphasis added):

Civilized nations, however, do not use their armies and fleets to open one another’s ports to trade.  What they use their armies and fleets for, is, when they quarrel, to close one another’s ports.  And their effort then is to prevent the carrying in of things even more than the bringing out of things – importing rather than exporting.  For a people can be more quickly injured by preventing them from getting things than by preventing them from sending things away.  Trade does not require force.  Free trade consists simply in letting people buy and sell as they want to buy and sell.  It is protection that requires force, for it consists in preventing people from doing what they want to do.  Protective tariffs are as much applications of force as are blockading squadrons, and their object is the same – to prevent trade.  The difference between the two is that blockading squadrons are a means whereby nations seek to prevent their enemies from trading; protective tariffs are a means whereby nations attempt to prevent their own people from trading.  What protection teaches us, is to do to ourselves in time of peace what enemies seek to do to us in time of war.

DBx: Whenever a government practices protectionism it wages war on its own people.

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