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    | Should Someone Use Deadly Force to Protect Property? Submitted by: 
			
Mark A. Taff
 Website: www.marktaff.com
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			There 
				are 3  comments 
			 	on this storyPost Comments | Read Comments
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    | The use of guns against property violations is highly moral, since a person’s life and his property are intertwined.
 
 Now, what we mean by property is of utmost importance. An anarcho-capitalist with a Rothbardian approach would say that property is the natural right of a person, by virtue of being a person. In other words, property rights are not a function of private property alone, but an extension of the life of the person. That is why Murray Rothbard stipulates that property rights are human rights, as an absolute principle.
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    | Comment by: 
     xqqme
     (1/29/2015) |  
    | The acquisition of property by legal methods necessarily requires the exchange of a portion of a person's lifetime for that property.  After all, how many hours must one work at even $40 per hour to acquire a late model vehicle costing forty or fifty thousand dollars, especially after the taxman cometh and taketh away a large percentage? 
 It is that time... that portion of a man's life that he protects when he protects his property.  Time spent to acquire property can not be returned.  It's as if the thief has murdered...  has actually stolen that portion of his victim's life.
 
 Of course, force should be legal to use in protecting one's property, and many of the State Constitutions include that provision the Right to Keep and Bear Arms.
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    | Comment by: 
     teebonicus
     (1/29/2015) |  
    | Short answer: Yes. |  
 
 
 
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              | QUOTES
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                      | That the said Constitution shall never be construed to authorize Congress to infringe the just liberty of the press or the rights of conscience; or to prevent the people of The United States who are peaceable citizens from keeping their own arms...  — Samuel Adams, Debates and Proceedings in the Convention of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, at 86-87 (Pierce & Hale, eds., Boston, 1850). |  |  |