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what is property-第29章

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you shall restore it every stroke。

Thus; the principle of occupation is abandoned; no longer is it said; 〃The land belongs to him who first gets possession of it。  Property; forced into its first intrenchment; repudiates its old adage; justice; ashamed; retracts her maxims; and sorrow lowers her bandage over her blushing cheeks。  And it was but yesterday that this progress in social philosophy began: fifty centuries required for the extirpation of a lie!  During this lamentable period; how many usurpations have been sanctioned; how many invasions glorified; how many conquests celebrated!  The absent dispossessed; the poor banished; the hungry excluded by wealth; which is so ready and bold in action!  Jealousies and wars; incendiarism and bloodshed; among the nations!  But henceforth; thanks to the age and its spirit; it is to be admitted that the earth is not a prize to be won in a race; in the absence of any other obstacle; there is a place for everybody under the sun。  Each one may harness his goat to the bearn; drive his cattle to pasture; sow a corner of a field; and bake his bread by his own fireside。

But; no; each one cannot do these things。  I hear it proclaimed on all sides; 〃Glory to labor and industry! to each according to his capacity; to each capacity according to its results!〃  And I see three…fourths of the human race again despoiled; the labor of a few being a scourge to the labor of the rest。


〃The problem is solved;〃 exclaims M。 Hennequin。  〃Property; the daughter of labor; can be enjoyed at present and in the future only under the protection of the laws。  It has its origin in natural law; it derives its power from civil law; and from the union of these two ideas; LABOR and PROTECTION; positive legislation results。〃 。 。 。


Ah! THE PROBLEM IS SOLVED! PROPERTY IS THE DAUGHTER OF LABOR!  What; then; is the right of accession; and the right of succession; and the right of donation; &c。; if not the right to become a proprietor by simple occupancy?  What are your laws concerning the age of majority; emancipation; guardianship; and interdiction; if not the various conditions by which he who is already a laborer gains or loses the right of occupancy; that is; property?

Being unable; at this time; to enter upon a detailed discussion of the Code; I shall content myself with examining the three arguments oftenest resorted to in support of property。  1。 APPROPRIATION; or the formation of property by possession; 2。 THE CONSENT OF MANKIND; 3。 PRESCRIPTION。  I shall then inquire into the effects of labor upon the relative condition of the laborers and upon property。

% 1。The Land cannot be Appropriated。


〃It would seem that lands capable of cultivation ought to be regarded as natural wealth; since they are not of human creation; but Nature's gratuitous gift to man; but inasmuch as this wealth is not fugitive; like the air and water;inasmuch as a field is a fixed and limited space which certain men have been able to appropriate; to the exclusion of all others who in their turn have consented to this appropriation;the land; which was a natural and gratuitous gift; has become social wealth; for the use of which we ought to pay。〃SAY:  POLITICAL ECONOMY。


Was I wrong in saying; at the beginning of this chapter; that the economists are the very worst authorities in matters of legislation and philosophy?  It is the FATHER of this class of men who clearly states the question; How can the supplies of Nature; the wealth created by Providence; become private property? and who replies by so gross an equivocation that we scarcely know which the author lacks; sense or honesty。  What; I ask; has the fixed and solid nature of the earth to do with the right of appropriation?  I can understand that a thing LIMITED and STATIONARY; like the land; offers greater chances for appropriation than the water or the sunshine; that it is easier to exercise the right of domain over the soil than over the atmosphere: but we are not dealing with the difficulty of the thing; and Say confounds the right with the possibility。  We do not ask why the earth has been appropriated to a greater extent than the sea and the air; we want to know by what right man has appropriated wealth WHICH HE DID NOT CREATE; AND WHICH NATURE GAVE TO HIM GRATUITOUSLY。

Say; then; did not solve the question which he asked。  But if he had solved it; if the explanation which he has given us were as satisfactory as it is illogical; we should know no better than before who has a right to exact payment for the use of the soil; of this wealth which is not man's handiwork。  Who is entitled to the rent of the land?  The producer of the land; without doubt。  Who made the land?  God。  Then; proprietor; retire!

But the creator of the land does not sell it: he gives it; and; in giving it; he is no respecter of persons。  Why; then; are some of his children regarded as legitimate; while others are treated as bastards?  If the equality of shares was an original right; why is the inequality of conditions a posthumous right?

Say gives us to understand that if the air and the water were not of a FUGITIVE nature; they would have been appropriated。  Let me observe in passing that this is more than an hypothesis; it is a reality。  Men have appropriated the air and the water; I will not say as often as they could; but as often as they have been allowed to。

The Portuguese; having discovered the route to India by the Cape of Good Hope; pretended to have the sole right to that route; and Grotius; consulted in regard to this matter by the Dutch who refused to recognize this right; wrote expressly for this occasion his treatise on the 〃Freedom of the Seas;〃 to prove that the sea is not liable to appropriation。

The right to hunt and fish used always to be confined to lords and proprietors; to…day it is leased by the government and communes to whoever can pay the license…fee and the rent。  To regulate hunting and fishing is an excellent idea; but to make it a subject of sale is to create a monopoly of air and water。

What is a passport?  A universal recommendation of the traveller's person; a certificate of security for himself and his property。  The treasury; whose nature it is to spoil the best things; has made the passport a means of espionage and a tax。  Is not this a sale of the right to travel?

Finally; it is permissible neither to draw water from a spring situated in another's grounds without the permission of the proprietor; because by the right of accession the spring belongs to the possessor of the soil; if there is no other claim; nor to pass a day on his premises without paying a tax; nor to look at a court; a garden; or an orchard; without the consent of the proprietor; nor to stroll in a park or an enclosure against the owner's will: every one is allowed to shut himself up and to fence himself in。  All these prohibitions are so many positive interdictions; not only of the land; but of the air and water。  We who belong to the proletaire class: property excommunicates us!  _Terra; et aqua; et aere; et igne interdicti sumus_。

Men could not appropriate the most fixed of all the elements without appropriating the three others; since; by French and Roman law; property in the surface carries with it property from zenith to nadir_Cujus est solum; ejus est usque ad caelum_。  Now; if the use of water; air; and fire excludes property; so does the use of the soil。  This chain of reasoning seems to have been presented by M。 Ch。 Comte; in his 〃Treatise on Property;〃 chap。 5。


〃If a man should be deprived of air for a few moments only; he would cease to exist; and a partial deprivation would cause him severe suffering; a partial or complete deprivation of food would produce like effects upon him though less suddenly; it would be the same; at least in certain climates! were he deprived of all clothing and shelter。 。 。 。  To sustain life; then; man needs continually to appropriate many different things。  But these things do not exist in like proportions。  Some; such as the light of the stars; the atmosphere of the earth; the water composing the seas and oceans; exist in such large quantities that men cannot perceive any sensible increase or diminution; each one can appro
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