From Chapter II, “Principles”, La Propriété, of Mes Idées Politique, by Charles Maurras.
Property is the natural safeguard of man, an industrious animal still more than reasonable, for whom his needs, his weakness, the dissatisfaction that he brings from the cradle make a narrow duty of transforming what surrounds him. Pascal is wrong to scoff at those poor children who say: this coin is mine.
One would not say “me”, without saying “mine”. Without property, man is condemned to death.
To possess is to command, it is to dispose of oneself, it is to be able to resist others, it is to exercise an influence, were it only by reaction.
Property emancipates existence and confers an authority at least on the goods of the earth and the fruits of labor.
⇐ Principle VI: Rights and Laws (Clarifications) Principle VIII: Heredity ⇒
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