“Because rights are only claims against other people, and not claims on other people and their property, rights end when they infringe on the rights of others.”
Daniel Alexander Brackins“To make a claim of ownership implies a claim against others. That is, others must refrain from interfering with your use of that thing. As such the very act of the body occupying its standing room is to make a claim against others because only one body can occupy the space at a time.”
Daniel Alexander Brackins, Private Property, Law, and the State“Because rights are only claims against other people, and not claims on other people and their property, rights end when they infringe on the rights of others.”
Daniel Alexander Brackins, Private Property, Law, and the State“The law itself was originally created in order to protect property. However, the law has been falsely attributed to being the reason property exists in the first place. At least, this is what the state would have us believe. The law does not create property rights because these already existed before the law was created. It is this false attribution that allows the state apparatus to conduct its mission of expropriation.”
Daniel Alexander Brackins, Private Property, Law, and the State“Democracy is the antithesis of liberty. The foundation and cornerstone of liberty is private property and majority rule is thus logically incompatible with this.”
Daniel Alexander Brackins, Private Property, Law, and the State“Any system of ethics must account for scarcity. If it doesn’t, humanity would perish due to misallocation of finite resources, including one’s own body.”
Daniel Alexander Brackins, Private Property, Law, and the State