So winning a lottery is a subsidy, and so is inheritence, according to you.
No, because unlike land value, those benefits are not taken from others by government and given to their recipients in return for contributing nothing.
Really? You made it sound like it's always knowable and always unfairly favorable to the buyer.
It is not knowable in advance, but has shown a fairly consistent pattern through history. And it is always unfairly favorable to the buyer because he is getting a legal entitlement to violate others' rights in perpetuity without making just compensation.
and that's only because the future is unknowable, right?
No, it's also because the future is too much bigger than the present.
Deliberate violation of others' rights without making just compensation is evil.
If you know what the price is, then you just need to pay what it is, if you don't know, then it'll never be accurate.
There is no way to pay an accurate price, so the market discounts the price to a level that is payable. There is not enough money in the world to pay a fair price for all future generations' rights, and most of the existing money is already earmarked for other purposes.
Thank you for agreeing that landowning is morally equivalent to stealing.
yeah, and i still don't see your point. You are comparing land owning to stealing, if that.
Yes, and you just agreed they are equivalent.
So I ask you again, how is the building owner any less able to utilize them then the "land owner" if there is one?
The building owner certainly utilizes them: that is why he chose to build there, and not in the middle of the desert. He just doesn't get the benefit of them, because he has to pay the landowner full market price for them.
Whether charged for or not, they are both allowed to use them.
?? But the building owner PAYS THE LANDOWNER for them. The landowner DOESN'T pay government and the community for them. He just paid the previous landowner. The building owner only "charges" for those advantages in the same sense that a retailer "charges" sales tax: he collects it, but doesn't get the benefit from it.
What the building owner paid for, is something he can transfer and "provide" to a new party, even if its not created or added by him.
So? It was created or added by SOMEONE, who was presumably paid for doing so. If B pays A to create something, B has effectively created it: he has initiated and motivated the process. If C then pays B for it, C is also indirectly paying A, and B's contribution has been taken over by C: it is now effectively C who has paid A to create it.
At a price he paid, your fault for not raising it.
No, such claims are just absurd and evil. If the government auctioned off a privilege of charging people rent for air to breathe, and the top bid was $10T, is that a fair price for being able to extort every dime from everyone in the country? Is the profitability of this air-rent extortion racket "my fault" for not bidding more than $10T and getting the privilege myself?
We disagree what makes one thing just.
I'm certain that you know stealing is unjust.
ANd I can't say the same for you, right?
Correct.
Yes it is, owning a car is violating your right to own my car.
How would I have a right to own your car? A right -- we are speaking here of natural rights, not legal rights -- is something people would have if others did not deprive them of it: like life, liberty, and enjoyment of the fruits of their labor. As your car is not a product of my labor, how could I possibly have a right to it?
Oh yes, I'm in denial and dishonest, unlike you. I'm not the one accused of "not believing in private property", and I even tried to defend you.
That accusation said more about the accuser than the accused.
You'll have the rest of this forum telling you that you're "justifying injustice" by allowing land to be unowned
Land self-evidently and indisputably all started out unowned. Nothing to do with me. You need to explain how it came rightly to be owned. And you can't. People much smarter than you have tried to explain it for hundreds of years, and they have never been able to do it.
and allowing government to confiscate land in the name of "public good" or "social justice", while calling a person's gamble and investment a "subsidy".
Thieves also gamble and invest in their schemes. But unlike landowners, they just don't have government helping them. The government's assistance to the landowner is what makes land value a subsidy.