imagenes-spencer-heath

Spencer Heath's

Series

Spencer Heath Archive

Item 2788

Typing on ring-binder page

Early October 1956

 

 

 

Early October, 1956

 

There are properties of many kinds — physical, chemical, vital, governmental, social. Anything that is appurtenant to or inherent in an organiza­tion, person or thing is its property.

 When united in large numbers, men are organized either politically under dominance of a special class, however constituted, or socially in recipro­cal (exchange) relationships, in which all are serving

and being served as each freely chooses — limited only by the like freedom of others — and no special class is set apart to practice dominance.

 It is a property of sovereignty to bow to no authority, of government to exercise force. When sovereignty bows, when government yields,
sovereignty is destroyed, government overthrown. Government, by definition, is the imposition of force. That is its basic function without which it ceases to function and is defunct. Government has
no inherent property other than force and what it maintains by force.  Once established, however “democratically”, it acknowledges no rule, observes no rule, practices no rule, yields to no rule, but the
Iron Rule of force. — not of its own making (rule)

 It expropriates property, does not create it

(Discontinued)

 

 

 

 

Metadata

Title Subject - 2788
Collection Name Spencer Heath Archive
Series Subject
Box number 17:2650-2844
Document number 2788
Date / Year 1956
Authors / Creators / Correspondents
Description Typing on ring-binder page
Keywords Property Sovereignty Government