KrauserKrauser wrote:
So because you let someone live with you, it's ok for people to break in to a house and claim it for their own?
An unoccupied house, yes.
Did this person ask to live there, or did he just break the lock and throw his shit into a room? Do you see the distinction here?
You're strawmanning the fact that the houses in question are unoccupied. The original question, which you are ignoring, Sir, was if you could break into an unoccupied house and live in it. And I said "yes, if you were prepared to share it with others". Because of course nobody has the right to a full sized McMansion unless they have a very large family, they're extremely inefficient uses of social resources, so they should be shared between families.
Sweet, can I steal your car when you aren't using it? I won't give it back because, well, finders keepers...
The car, good Sir, is being used. Same thing with Broomstick's comments. The property is being used--there is a house on part of it, the rest of it is being maintained as a nature preserve, so, no, it's not terra nullius. I am proposing after all that the law be changed, so that property which sits unused (as in a whole plot, and preservation as a nature preserve could be registered with the government, under strict terms, to prevent this from happening) could be seized and redistributed. Now, note that such nature preserve factors are already in use. You can 'landbank' your property, getting paid to agree to never develop it, and legally it can no longer be developed. So if you want a nature preserve on your property, landbank it, it's eternally a nature preserve, and now it cannot be seized because it remains continuously in use as a nature preserve. Very simple.
Well what if I found a pile of cash that was just sitting around, or stole some from an ATM, I mean it's FDIC insured so they get their money back. No harm, no foul, right?
No, because you're causing overall harm to the economy and a stress on the government, i.e., you're consuming social resources without cause. This is not the case with unproductive possessions.
Can I steal someone's car they have sitting in their yard? I mean the windshield is busted and it probably needs alot of work and I sure do need that specific car for some reason, I can steal that too because they aren't using it, Right? They have a bunch of working cars in the drive way so they shouldn't mind if I just drive up there with a truck, ruin their lawn and take it without asking. Sounds perfectly reasonable.
If the car has sat there in operating condition unused for years, depreciating, yes. If it is in regular use, no. That is the ethical consideration. Notice that the same true of older laws, for instance salvage laws where if you find a ship abandoned on the high seas, you get to claim a substantial portion of its value for yourself, with the owners are obligated to provide to you, or else you can keep the vessel, and also with steadholding laws which allow you squatter's rights.
These are nothing more than an extension of practices already written into law for centuries into other areas, and giving them more regular use, and more rights and considerations to the squatters/salvagers, just like the more than 200 operating and successful Reclaimed Companies in Argentina are now productive parts of their economy, whereas under the old owners the workers seized them from, they were idle, and the workers were unemployed. That is a fact which cannot be disputed--the practice of seizing unused businesses by the workers and reopening them has contributed to the economic health and recovery of Argentina.
Support for the rule of law does not equal undying support for capitalism. To be honest my hard on for the free market has justifiably taken a few massive blows recently and my views are moderating accordingly. That does not mean that I suddenly support rampant theft of property because someone believes they will benefit from it.
You should have no right to property if you do not regularly use it, and the definitions of regular use should be set by the government... To force the government to accommodate such methods, civil disobedience should be used.
Furthermore, since I favour the nationalization of major lending banks anyway, I don't care about harm to the banks from this, since if it's regularized this would be part of the government process for dealing with property.