Evasion. You claim that property rights are "primitive" when in fact they are quite sophisticated and are the basis of civilization. Property law is what keeps us from simply bashing the next guy in the head with a rock and taking his food.HomerJay wrote:They are very primitive, aimed at solving disputes over ownership.Coito ergo sum wrote:What aspects of property ownership are "primitive?" Can I have your car and house? Or, are you asserting some "primitive notion?"
What's primitive is the thinking of those who don't believe in respect for property rights. That's almost always a manifestation of jealousy and greed, which are indeed primitive emotions.
There is in civilized societies. But don't confuse "unalienable" with "unregulable."There's no such thing as an inalienable right to possession (if there were the merkins would be a long way down the list of people entitled to the US of A, behind the French, even).
How does one "manage" history, pray tell. Just because you venerate some old object does not make it valuable. I've got an old pair of shitty underpants I'll be happy to mail you to prove that point.I used shoes as a more trivial example than a car or house but in any trivial example it would be a remarkable and serendipitous happening if the rights and mechanisms established to decide the ownership of a shoe box, just also happened to allow us to manage our culture and heritage effectively. Especially as the rules for shoe boxes weren't designed or intended to manage human history.
Again, your veneration of ancient objects is not a rational basis for imposing confiscatory rules on the owners of ancient objects. Unless YOU own the object, and have preserved it for a long time so that it can become a venerable object, it's none of your business what happens to it. To believe otherwise is to give others the power to control NEW objects in perpetuity so that they may become old, venerable objects, which is of course asinine.Of course the rules for shoe box equality don't effectively manage human history and there is no reason to use them in disputes over heritage, it's a non-sequitur.
What "demands" are those, and upon what rational basis do you expect others to comply with those demands?Our commitment to shoe box equality has zero impact on our commitment and demands for human history.
Over here, we like to call that "theft," and we put those who do such things in jail. The hypocrisy of someone, particularly government, ignoring an artwork from the moment it was created for a hundred or a thousand years and then suddenly deciding that it's a "heritage object" now worthy of veneration when it has done NOTHING To preserve or protect that object, something which the various owners down the centuries HAVE done is enormous, and it's simply a Communist collectivist mindset that believes that the individual is the servant of the collective, and that no one is entitled to own anything, not even themselves, and that all or anything may be taken from anyone by the collective to meet its needs or desires without any compunction or respect.If we say we're taking that $100 million artwork off you for posterity, your claim that we said a shoe box was yours to do as you wish with, is perfectly valid, if a little quaint and unconnected.
Your post demonstrates the quintessential divide between the thinking of the evil, selfish, delusional collectivist, who will steal from whomever they can, claiming that their right to do so is absolute because they are "equal" to every other person and must be allowed to "equalize" wealth by force, and rational human beings who acknowledge that individuals do indeed have unalienable rights and the right to ownership of property is high on that list, because that belief is what makes civilization possible and keeps us from killing one another.