Land and Modern Individualism
By: Mike • Essay • 1,164 Words • March 2, 2010 • 846 Views
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Land and Modern Individualism
These days there have been many issues surrounding the topic of private property and eminent domain. I feel that eminent domain is a good way to keep the needs of the community and each person's individual property rights balanced. Even thought I believe individual property rights are more important that the needs of the community, I also believe the government sometimes has to take that property away for the better good of the community. At the same time I also understand how people feel when they talk about "NIMBY" (not in my back yard), and also about their personal needs.
Let me take you back into the history of the American land. After the 18th century, Americans turned their backs on the old ideas of the Puritans. The Puritans believed in the population acting within the religious ways of the times. These new settlers had a very different idea in mind. They were going to claim this land anyway they could. This brings us to Cronon's argument in Bounding The Land. It is referring to the different beliefs on land ownership between the English colonists and the Native Americans. The English believed that the Indians squandered the lands natural resources and that they have no natural right to the land. Indians did not own the land, but only used, and lived off the land's resources. They only owned what they made and grew, and that was enough for them. But it certainly wasn't enough for the English. They wanted to control the land using the technique of "ownership or private property". That was the problem with Indian property rights. They didn't consist of any ownership or sovereignty. They had largely different perspectives on the ownership by the community and the individual ownership. Because of these large differences the English decided to take full control of the land. When they came to colonize they basically took the land from the Indians. The only land that was rightfully the Indian's was the land that was given to them by the English. What the English were doing bring us to the concept of eminent domain.
Eminent domain is the moral groundwork by which government acquires private property through compulsory purchase. The idea holds that to advance the greater welfare of the public, government must be able to use land and other private goods to which it would not otherwise have access. It is defined at the 5th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution as taking private property for public use with only compensation being paid to the landowner. This compensation was not seen in the case with the English and the Indians. These public uses have normally been railroads, highways, bridges, parks ext. Lately this eminent domain has been used for things completely different. An example is in Pittsburgh, property owners are fighting to keep their land from being taken away to build malls, casino's and factories. This is one of the many examples of the abuse of eminent domain.
This is where NIMBY is introduced. NIMBY, which stands for "not in my backyard" is used to 1. "Express opposition by local citizens to the locating in their neighborhood of a civic project." Some examples of these "civic projects" are: a jail, garbage dump, drug rehabilitation center, or anything that the community considers unsightly, dangerous and likely to lead to property values decreasing. From this is how they derived the compensation and eminent domain laws.
It is strange how they come up with these laws to compensate you after they have taken your land. This is where we come to the development of the property law. How did the protection of your private property come about? Protection and content are given to the ownership of property by custom or law. The type of property law in a society may be taken as an index of its social and economic system. Even though there is a difference between realty and personality. Realty is chiefly land and improvements built thereon. Sometimes it is loosely described as lands, tenements, and hereditaments. Personality, or personal property, consists chiefly on movable, portable objects. Personal property gives the owner the right to give, sell or determine the distribution of the property. Although this may be true, there are many different limits on ownership. Public