“The right to education and to free speech having been gained for woman, in the long run every other good thing was sure to be obtained.”

—  Lucy Stone

The Progress of Fifty Years (1893)

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Lucy Stone photo
Lucy Stone 34
American abolitionist and suffragist 1818–1893

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Context: Property rights are not like other rights, contrary to what Madison and a lot of modern political theory says. If I have the right to free speech, it doesn't interfere with your right to free speech. But if I have property, that interferes with your right to have that property, you don't have it, I have it. So the right to property is very different from the right to freedom of speech. This is often put very misleadingly about rights of property; property has no right. But if we just make sense out of this, maybe there is a right to property, one could debate that, but it's very different from other rights.

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Variant: It is not even enough that the fortune should have been gained without doing damage to the community. We should only permit it to be gained and kept so long as the gaining and the keeping represent benefit to the community.
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