There is one question that anarchists (no rulers) can't answer. Land ownership requires rulers. Either self-rule where each landowner is the ruler such as kingdom, dictatorship, oligarchy, or collective ruler where everybody gets together and makes laws of the land. No matter what, land ownership requires rules and rulers = government.
Anarchists will dance around that issue until the end of time.
You've put me in the uncomfortable position of believing one of these three options.
1) You suffer from a faulty memory.
2) You don't read anything that anarchists post in refutation of your claims.
3) You are a liar.
We've had this discussion before and I offered you concrete examples from history where land ownership existed and flourished in a stateless society.
If the search on this forum didn't suck walnuts through garden hoses, I'd offer it for you.
For those of you who aren't in one of those categories, here are two examples:
Kowloon walled city was a stateless society in Hong Kong in the 20th Century. It existed for over 75 years. It was ruled by gangs for the first half of its existence. In the latter half, after the gangs were eliminated, somehow the inhabitants built up 6 square blocks into a 14-story megacity where over 30,000 people lived. Individuals lived in individual apartments. There were factories. There were regular businesses like restaurants and dentists. There were temples.
If someone who is actually reading this can offer guesses as to how such a thing is possible in the most densely populated patch of earth
ever, without property ownership, I'm all ears.
Ireland was a stateless society from ancient times until the 17th Century. In the middle ages there were actually two classes of people - those who owned land, and those who didn't. Their legal system (Yeah - legal system - as in system of laws, judges, courts, and all that other stuff that people are claiming aren't possible in a stateless society) apparently treated the "free" (landowners) differently from the "unfree" (those who didn't own land).
So they not only had a legal system, they not only had land ownership, but they also had
legal incentive to own land.
And no state.
By the way, women, minorities, and all sorts of people were allowed to own land in Ireland at that time. Something we didn't clean up in the statist world until after Ireland was invaded by England and finally subjugated by the systematic murder of 4 in every 10 people.
Am I dancing? Are
you dancing?
RiseAgainst, I was actually mad at you for your attitude in the beginning of this thread, but I apologize for that - you were simply ahead of the curve.