While other Objectivists may disagree, I would say sure. It's your land, and I for one will not cross it unless I can pay your $1000. Of course, nothing stops me from tunneling through the mountain, or establishing a new pass. I'd also make it my life's work to drive you out of business, and more to see you economically destroyed so that you die alone, homeless, and starving. I wouldn't violate any of your rights, but I'd destroy you.Hellbound said:So how would this be handled? Is it perfectly fine for me to, essentially, starve most of the town to death (those who can't afford a helicopter or my tolls)? I have not initiated the use of any force, except as explicitly allowed (to maintain control and use of my own property). I got everything I have by voluntary exchange.
That's fine as well. I'd again do everything I could to run you out of business (I may not try so hard to destroy your personal wealth and see you die starving and homeless, though).What if I let everyone use the roads across my land for free, unless you're black? Then I simply tell you that you can't use my land?
The idea of adding value is only applicable in an undeveloped and UNOWNED wilderness. Personally, I believe Rand misapplied the concept when it came to the native peoples of the Americas. A more applicable idea would be an island. Let's say I find an island, and mark it on maps and everything, but do nothing else with it. I in no sense own that island. You can go there and set up a hut and say "It's mine", and I have no recourse but to accept that (well, I can TRY to sue you, but I'll lose). That said, if the island was sufficiently large you can't rationally justify setting up a hut and saying you own the whole thing--if Australia were uninhabited, you couldn't justify saying that you owned it all merely because you'd made a shack. The limits of your property ownership must be defined somehow, and the most objective means of defining it are the limits of the areas you've developed. If you put a fence around an area, it's yours. If you plow it and plant it, it's yours. If you simply set up a hut and don't touch anything else, that "anything else" is still up for grabs (but your hut is not, nor I would say is a buffer around it).To question another part of the proposition, who decide whether or not I'm "adding value" to my property?
If you already own your property, it's yours, period. You can let it go back to the natural state, or like my grandfather intentionally preserve and actively facilitate that move. Or you can build a factory on it. It's YOURS, and whether or not you add value is irrelevant to the discussion of property rights in such cases. Adding value is not the fundamental aspect of property rights--the concept of property rights is more or less fundamental itself (it has support, from the basic axioms on up, but you'll have to find someone else to explain that better, because it's not an area I've explored).
Both, really. The 8 add value by converting an unused resource into a usable form. The other 2 add value by adding the protection inherent in property ownership (and enforceable by the government) to the wilderness. They obviously value the natural state of that land, and adding their protection to it adds a value.Suppose there are 10 individuals who all buy plots of land covered in timber. 8 start logging operations, producing lumber and timber products for the local community. The other two simply own the land, doing nothing with it but keeping others off it. Which one is adding value?
