Actually, there have been many "settled" periods in the last 80 years. Appreciate that. The Trump admin is breaking it all, for what? Their personal enrichment. Important to call it out for what it is~
I have a great deal of optimism for Trump and many of his great administration members. What we the people need to understand is the basics of gross wealth distribution and how to address it by shifting to land value tax in our local communities.
Alanna Hartzok is Administrative Director and a United Nations NGO Representative for the International Union for Land Value Taxation where she helps administer land value tax implementation projects on all five continents. She is the author of The Earth Belongs to Everyone which received the Radical Middle Book Award.
In 2011 she received the International Earth Day Award from the Earth Society Foundation. Her E.F. Schumacher Lecture is titled Democracy, Earth Rights and the Next Economy.
Hartzok initiated tax reform legislation, that passed with a nearly unanimous vote, enabling the nearly 1000 towns of Pennsylvania to shift their tax base off of buildings and onto land value.
Her articles are referenced in the Association of Bay Area Governments, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, Dialogues (the Canada West Foundation) and in books, including The Natural Wealth of Nations and Creating a Sustainable World. She was featured in Planet Champions: Adventures in Saving the World.
She was two times a Congressional candidate for her district of Pennsylvania.
Video "Economics of Peace and Earth Rights Democracy" at the 4th Summit of the Global Alliance for Ministries and Departments of Peace
Alanna Hartzok is Administrative Director and a United Nations NGO Representative for the International Union for Land Value Taxation and International Liaison for the Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, and co-founder of Earth Rights Institute. She is the author of The Earth Belongs to Everyone which received the Radical Middle Book Award. This anthology of 30 of her articles and essays includes these themes:; Sharing Our Common Heritage; Land for People, Not for Profit; Financing Local to Global Public Goods; Women, Earth and Economic Power; Restructuring Economic Relationships; and Economics of War and Peace.
Alanna has lectured worldwide in more than 30 countries. In 2011 she received the International Earth Day Award from the Earth Society Foundation. Her E.F. Schumacher Lecture was delivered at Amherst College and published as Democracy, Earth Rights and the Next Economy.
Alanna initiated tax reform legislation and worked with state Senator Terry Punt and his staff as well as the Pennsylvania State Association of Boroughs to guide it through Pennsylvania legislative hearings to nearly unanimous passage of Senate Bill 211, signed by Governor Thomas Ridge as Act 108 in November of 1998. This permitted the nearly 1000 small towns of Pennsylvania to shift their tax base off of buildings and onto land value, either partly or completely.
Her articles are referenced in the literature of the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) in California, an issue of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, Dialogues, a publication of the Canada West Foundation, and in several books, including the Worldwatch Institute book The Natural Wealth of Nations by David Roodman and Creating a Sustainable World, an anthology edited by Trent Schroyer and Tom Golodik. She is one of several people featured in Planet Champions: Adventures in Saving the World - New Paths to Peace, Prosperity & Human Rights, by Jack Yost.
In 2014 she was the Democratic Party’s candidate for Congress in Pennsylvania’s District 9 and in 2001 she ran for the same office as the Green Party candidate.
Actually, there have been many "settled" periods in the last 80 years. Appreciate that. The Trump admin is breaking it all, for what? Their personal enrichment. Important to call it out for what it is~
I have a great deal of optimism for Trump and many of his great administration members. What we the people need to understand is the basics of gross wealth distribution and how to address it by shifting to land value tax in our local communities.
Alanna Hartzok is Administrative Director and a United Nations NGO Representative for the International Union for Land Value Taxation where she helps administer land value tax implementation projects on all five continents. She is the author of The Earth Belongs to Everyone which received the Radical Middle Book Award.
In 2011 she received the International Earth Day Award from the Earth Society Foundation. Her E.F. Schumacher Lecture is titled Democracy, Earth Rights and the Next Economy.
Hartzok initiated tax reform legislation, that passed with a nearly unanimous vote, enabling the nearly 1000 towns of Pennsylvania to shift their tax base off of buildings and onto land value.
Her articles are referenced in the Association of Bay Area Governments, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, Dialogues (the Canada West Foundation) and in books, including The Natural Wealth of Nations and Creating a Sustainable World. She was featured in Planet Champions: Adventures in Saving the World.
She was two times a Congressional candidate for her district of Pennsylvania.
Video "Economics of Peace and Earth Rights Democracy" at the 4th Summit of the Global Alliance for Ministries and Departments of Peace
https://vimeo.com/6913526
xxxxxxxx
Alanna Hartzok is Administrative Director and a United Nations NGO Representative for the International Union for Land Value Taxation and International Liaison for the Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, and co-founder of Earth Rights Institute. She is the author of The Earth Belongs to Everyone which received the Radical Middle Book Award. This anthology of 30 of her articles and essays includes these themes:; Sharing Our Common Heritage; Land for People, Not for Profit; Financing Local to Global Public Goods; Women, Earth and Economic Power; Restructuring Economic Relationships; and Economics of War and Peace.
Alanna has lectured worldwide in more than 30 countries. In 2011 she received the International Earth Day Award from the Earth Society Foundation. Her E.F. Schumacher Lecture was delivered at Amherst College and published as Democracy, Earth Rights and the Next Economy.
Alanna initiated tax reform legislation and worked with state Senator Terry Punt and his staff as well as the Pennsylvania State Association of Boroughs to guide it through Pennsylvania legislative hearings to nearly unanimous passage of Senate Bill 211, signed by Governor Thomas Ridge as Act 108 in November of 1998. This permitted the nearly 1000 small towns of Pennsylvania to shift their tax base off of buildings and onto land value, either partly or completely.
Her articles are referenced in the literature of the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) in California, an issue of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, Dialogues, a publication of the Canada West Foundation, and in several books, including the Worldwatch Institute book The Natural Wealth of Nations by David Roodman and Creating a Sustainable World, an anthology edited by Trent Schroyer and Tom Golodik. She is one of several people featured in Planet Champions: Adventures in Saving the World - New Paths to Peace, Prosperity & Human Rights, by Jack Yost.
In 2014 she was the Democratic Party’s candidate for Congress in Pennsylvania’s District 9 and in 2001 she ran for the same office as the Green Party candidate.