For something you own, you are allowed to use it as you see fit (presuming you don't break the law). For example, if you own a home you can decide who to allow into it, and can decorate it yourself, rather than having everyone come by and mess with it. Compare a home with a public building and you'll soon get the picture. While the government owns public buildings, so you aren't allowed to, say, break things in them, they are open to many people. If you were legally allowed to vandalize public buildings, then that would be as if the building was unowned (although I don't think you are allowed to vandalize even unowned bulidings).
As for other things, well for anything really, it comes down to who can use it. You can let others use it if you want, but you don't have to. If there was no ownership, it would be a pure communist society. Communism like the USSR was mor of a socialist because the government owned everything, but in pure communism people take from a collective pool that no one owns. Imagine, for example, if other people decided they wanted to use your toothbrush to clean the toilet. You wouldn't want that, now would you?
As for other things, well for anything really, it comes down to who can use it. You can let others use it if you want, but you don't have to. If there was no ownership, it would be a pure communist society. Communism like the USSR was mor of a socialist because the government owned everything, but in pure communism people take from a collective pool that no one owns. Imagine, for example, if other people decided they wanted to use your toothbrush to clean the toilet. You wouldn't want that, now would you?
John Adams Wrote:The Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion.