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by lisper
4282 days ago
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> Why should ownership of land be equal to the right to restrict access to said land? For the same reason that ownership of a car equals the right to restrict who gets to drive the car: that's what ownership means. > Where I come from (Norway) a land owner needs a good reason to deny the public access to the land. Then no one really owns land in Norway. The government owns he land and grants people development rights. One could argue that this is how things ought to be (e.g. http://www.henrygeorge.org/pcontents.htm). But such theories are historically unpopular in the U.S. |
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It's always interesting to see the reactions of people who view property ownership as some kind of natural law when you present them with systems of property ownership that differ on fundamental points. Property ownership is entirely a social construct that differs significantly across different cultures. I don't see what basis you have for calling your preferred legal system the one true meaning of ownership.
Nobody really 'owns' land anywhere. It's always a set of rights granted to you by the government, unless you are an absolute monarch yourself.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_Reform_(Scotland)_Act_200...