• snake_cased@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    Landownership is wrong all together.

    If you think about it, it is completely absurd, why anyone assumes the right to ‘own’ a piece of land. Or even more land than the other guy. Someone must have been the person to first come up with the idea of ownership, but it is and was never based on anything other than an idea, and we should question it.

    After all inheritance of landownership is a major cornerstone of our unjust and exploitative society.

    • nexguy@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      People like the idea of the stability ownership offers. You can’t be kicked out of your house or off your land you own because your income dropped out lost a job. How would you suggest this stability is maintained?

    • Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      Unfortunately land will fall into disrepair if someone doesn’t actually own it. They have no incentive to invest in its upkeep if it can just be taken away at any moment. There’s a reason rental buildings have a reputation for being unkempt, the renters don’t want to pay for the upkeep since it’s not theirs and the landlords don’t want to pay for the upkeep because they don’t live there.

      It gets even worse if government owns it, it would take 6 months just to get a light bulb changed let alone a new roof or hedges trimmed.

      • snake_cased@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        That might be the case in your country, but there are many cultures that are perfectly capable of sharing and keeping common infrastructure in good conditions. Your personal experience isn’t generic and globally true.

        A country’s land should not be owned by individuals, in my opinion, but used by those who need it and when they do so. A country’s land is what makes it a land, so it cannot be owned or sold. Someone inheriting it from someone who took it and maybe sold it should give no legitimate claim to possession.

    • Moira_Mayhem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      10 months ago

      It goes back to when good agricultural land discovered to be so ridiculously effective at feeding people.

      Not the beginning of wealth, but certainly one of the oldest still used store of wealth.

      So much has been fucked up by discovering agriculture, it was also the beginning of institutional slavery.

      • Rev3rze@feddit.nl
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        10 months ago

        You’re not wrong but surely you don’t mean to say that mankind should never have discovered agriculture, right? At that point we may as well say that gaining sentience fucked everything up because it was the beginning of wilfully hurting others despite having the capacity for empathy (aka doing evil things).

        • alex@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          but surely you don’t mean to say that mankind should never have discovered agriculture, right?

          RETURN TO MONKE

    • UnrepententProcrastinator@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      Every generation, people want to try new things and it’s nice. But landownership can and has been and good thing in a way that just going back to “anarchy” wouldn’t work. E.g. creation of ghettos, who gets to farm the best land, etc.

      So then the suggestions are that the land are owned and “managed” by the state apparatus. Now we have a few famines in history to show us how gaining favor in a political system is not the best way to manage the land.

      I’m open to better suggestions but just shitting on land ownership seems easy and unproductive.

      • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Now we have a few famines in history to show us how gaining favor in a political system is not the best way to manage the land.

        Doesn’t that also mean The Irish famine shows private land ownership isn’t the best way to manage land?

        • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          The potato famine was caused by a new type of blight being brought from the Americas back to Europe.

          I don’t see how being beaten by a novel disease has anything to do with private land ownership.