Paul wrote:.....What does it mean to say that something is your property? That you can use it as you wish and keep someone else from using it? What if that someone else is bigger than you are? Or just claims that it is his property? It's not really your property if your rights depend on your personal ability to fight off others or on the altruism of others. Basically, your rights aren't worth anything unless society agrees to enforce them......
This is a kernel of truth that escapes a lot of people. Property, in a certain legal sense, is "an aggregate of rights which are
guaranteed and protected by the government." Black's Law Dictionary, p. 1095 (5th ed. 1979) (italics added). In the absence of protection by the government, I do not have a property right
in the legal sense.
If my only protection with respect to the house and land where I live is that I have a bigger gun (and a meaner and more determined disposition) than the bad guy who wants to oust me from the land, then I do not have a property right
in the legal sense. I may have what some would call a "natural right".
The purpose of government is to secure natural rights by creating (among other things)
legal rights. Natural rights may be said to exist in the absence of government. Legal rights, by contrast, are an aspect of a society that has a government, and legal rights exist only to the extent recognized by government.
EDIT: From something I read somewhere.....
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights [i.e., to secure these Natural Rights], Governments are instituted among Men....
(italics added).
Again,
Natural rights, in some sense, may exist without the existence or protection of a government.
Legal rights (whether property rights or other kinds of rights) exist only in contemplation of
government, and only to the extent recognized and protected by government.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet