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No.


Private property is not an inalienable right -- whether you look at the us constitution, locke's 2nd treatise or the declaration of human rights itself.


What you had prior to the political association, is the liberty to possess what is in your power to possess.


There is a fundamental difference between your liberty and your rights.




Where in your constitution did it say you have a right to private property????


You have the right to the pursuit of happiness NOT a right to private property. If private property were a right, then it would be a state of injustice that people become bankrupt.


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