and I do not agree with the
> >anarchist statement that "property is theft."

> The phrase "property is theft" is from Proudhon. His view was not at all
> simplistic, but based on a critique of the capital - labour relation...
All the more that in this precise case, Proudhon was denying the solution of
the collective property raised by Karl Marx: to him, collective property was
the best way to create a social monster, unable to adapt himself to the
various figures of each individual needs.
this was the departure of a very deep rivalry between the two philospohers,
culminating with the victory of Bakounin in the elections for the head of
the first international, and with the two books "philosophy of
misery"/"misery of philosophy", both wrote as pamphlets.


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