• Annoyed_🦀 A
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    27 months ago

    I do control my property, but i don’t control the land my property on. The post is talking about gaining property via violence, you’re talking about how i don’t have control of my property. Why you keep fixated on the wrong thing is beyond me, but if you think we’re anywhere close to how we gain property in lawless time, then you’re way off the mark.

    Anarchist always think they will win the violence game, and they should totally visit Sudan to test how far their ideology will go.

    • @bane_killgrind@lemmy.ml
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      87 months ago

      Some grandma being lawfully evicted from their home is violence.

      This isn’t a discussion about pillaging on horseback, it’s a discussion about how regulatory capture, predatory businesses, and other exploitation is morally similar to pillaging on horseback. Not a discussion about a tied up hostage with a gun to their head, it’s about how the threat of homelessness is the gun, you are a hostage.

    • @Garbanzo@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I’m telling you you’re wrong. If you displease the government your property can be seized or destroyed. Resistance will be met with violence. Further, it’s not even necessary for you personally to offend those who really control your property. If a fleeing felon takes shelter in your home or business your property can be destroyed in the ensuing violence and you won’t be compensated. Guess what happens next? You pay the bills to get the property back up to standards or get run off through further violence or the implicit threat of violence. The next person to come along and buy your property will swear up and down that violence had nothing to do with their purchase. Ultimately you have only the control that those who monopolize violence grant to you, and only so long as that control does not conflict with their priorities.