Aizle wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
Ideally it would be a society that viewed the very act of ifnringing on another's rights as abhorrent and antithetical to the ideals of a civilized society and would never ask a politician to do such.
However that isn't going to happen. So there must be written penalties in the law for a politician who either brings such up for a vote, and/or votes for it.
LOL, yeah good luck with that.
Seriously tho. If everyone has the right to the pursuit of happiness, and the right of self-ownership, how do you reconcile the following examples:
A pig farmer wants to be as efficient and profitable as he can, so he crams a large number of pigs into a small amount of land. The smell is ungodly bad and negatively affects his neighbors to the point of reducing their property values so they they complain and try and force him to change his behavior which will cost him money.
Middle class suburban neighborhood. Most houses and yards are pretty well kept, but not perfect. Mowed semi-regularly and basically clean. One neighbor is trying to start up his own auto repair business. He constantly has different cars in the driveway that he's working on, and often times will have 4-5 cars parked on the street (legally) and sometimes a couple in his front yard. There is often the sound of air tools and the smell of oil. The neighbors all complain about the noise and eyesore.
The first is handled by laws regulating pollution, if harm is caused by the smell such as inability to utilize one's own property (backyard for example) then he owes restitution and should cease action.
The second can be handled in a similar way depending on sound levels and smell of oil.
If neither are so bad to cause inability to use then they can talk civiliny, picket, start a boycott. One doesn't have a right to not smell bad smells or to have a view that is enjoyable by one's own standards. What if the man who has the "eyesore" believes that all the other properties without cars in their yards are eyesores? Why would the majority get to enforce subjective standards let alone penalties for not meeting them on another citizen?
Neither has anything that should be actionable based on property value. No one has the right to make their neighbors house or yard look like the one complaining wishes it would look or would have it look if they owned the property.