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Wealth and Want | |||||||
... because democracy alone is not enough to produce widely shared prosperity. | |||||||
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Blackstone Dan Sullivan: Are
you a Real Libertarian, or a ROYAL Libertarian?
The distinction between common property and state
property is lost on royal libertarians. Common property
is that to which we all have inalienable rights. State
property is that which the state actually owns, and can
dispose of as it sees fit. For example, a public right of
way is literally a right of way. Under principles of
common law, nobody, not even the king, could close a
traveled road and make it private property. A state
maintenance truck, on the other hand, is state property,
which can be sold if it no longer suits state
purposes.
The earth, therefore, and all things therein, are the general property of all mankind, from the immediate gift of the Creator. --William Blackstone It is a royal libertarian notion, and not a classical liberal ideal, to treat land as state property, for if land did not rightfully belong to the state, how could the state have granted it to favored citizens? Classical liberals, not royal
libertarians, are the ones who deny the state's right to
appropriate the earth and allocate it to privileged
individuals on favored terms. Classical liberals also who
hold the key to abolishing taxation, by suggesting that the
community (not the state) charge a user fee to landholders
based on the value of the land.... Read the whole
piece Bill Batt: The Compatibility of Georgist Economics and Ecological Economics
In the Georgist context a
titleholder has the right to ownership of land in
usufruct, but not in fee simple. As long as an owner uses
land and other elements of nature in accord with the
rules and laws of society, one retains a possessory
interest. That interest extends to the privilege
to use land for all purposes consistent with its proper
maintenance and care. It extends even in some cases to
the right to preclude others from any trespass at all.
But what it typically does not include
is the right to any speculative gain that would follow
from title in freehold, or the right to use land beyond
what it is capable of sustaining. Use implies that
its quality is not diminished for the future availability
of others, and that there is an obligation for the user
to pay to society a just price in exchange for such use.
One had no right, for example, to strip a forest of its
trees. Enough is known now about the arrangements of land
ownership and use in comparative perspective to assert
with confidence that the historical practice of title in
fee simple or freehold has been far more the exception
than rule.20
Taking the long view of history, title in usufruct has
been by far the more common pattern of ownership of
natural resources, except where Roman jurisprudence and
its offspring have spread throughout the world and come
to dominate.
In the United States, the definition of real property as explicated in the legal Commentaries of Sir William Blackstone may have been pivotal in the adoption of freehold interpretations of ownership over leasehold.21 For several years after this nation was founded which system of title would prevail hung in the balance.22 Thomas Paine was certainly an advocate of the latter,23 as was Jefferson.24 Hamilton, on the other hand, was a defender of propertied interests and titles in fee simple, and especially to his in-laws, the landowning families of upstate New York known as the Patroons.25 Leaseholds were used in several of the colonies, with the fees paid to governors.26 ... read the whole article |
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