If I own land in the United States, is it really my land or does it belong to the government? I am free to buy and sell land to anyone as if it was the same as any other kind of property, but could I say, sell my land to the government of another country? I can sell anything I own to anyone in the world, but does land work the same way?
5/26/2009 7:28:26 PM
you could sell your land to another country, but i believe that land that is sovereign to america, regardless of what you want to do with itkind of like you can't just grow weed on your own land
5/26/2009 7:36:58 PM
By definition, one does not own something if he has to continue making payments to a 3rd party simply in order to retain possession of it. So, no, nobody who pays property taxes owns their property.Putting that nit-pick aside, there are plenty of other restrictions like you mention.
5/26/2009 7:38:16 PM
1. It is your land.2. You can sell your property to the government of another country...it would then become something like an embassy. The hard part would be convincing the government of another country to purchase your property.
5/26/2009 7:38:55 PM
it is your land until the government decides to build a road through your house
5/26/2009 7:40:39 PM
^Or if they just want to hand it over to a developer to build a mall
5/26/2009 7:47:47 PM
5/26/2009 9:31:33 PM
or if you stop paying property taxes on it.
5/26/2009 9:40:55 PM
or the mafia makes you an offer you can not refuse
5/26/2009 9:56:12 PM
"can not refuse"
5/26/2009 10:24:30 PM
^^In which case I have to pay property tax to the government and tribute to the mob for protection.Oy.
5/26/2009 11:50:56 PM
or if you dig a ditch, and the rain fills it in..and the EPA declares it a wetlands, forbids you from developing it...Now useless...you are forced to sell it to an "environmental" group like the Nature Concervancy for a song...who in turn sell it to the gov't for a big profit.
5/27/2009 12:10:10 AM
Seriously though, how would it work say if Indian tribes were to buy adjacent land to their tribal territories? Would they be able to expand their areas that way?
5/27/2009 2:00:41 AM
Pretty simple (but unbearably ambiguous) answer. You're asking about the nature of fee simple, which is the type of land ownership common in the U.S.:
5/27/2009 2:25:55 AM
5/27/2009 8:05:54 AM
5/27/2009 10:27:08 AM
5/27/2009 10:47:37 AM
^^environment >>>>>>>>>>>>>> human libertyFuck you.[Edited on May 27, 2009 at 10:48 AM. Reason : ]
5/27/2009 10:47:58 AM
^ Who decides what's environmentally correct?
5/27/2009 10:51:20 AM
5/27/2009 11:03:36 AM
It's called common law.
5/27/2009 11:11:59 AM
5/27/2009 11:15:47 AM
^What if your mother was vacationing in FL and a hurricane was on the way. Would you put that flower's "right" to be non-endangered over your mother's safety?
5/27/2009 11:28:16 AM
^READ:
5/27/2009 11:36:36 AM
I figured that was sarcasm
5/27/2009 11:37:25 AM
5/27/2009 11:41:11 AM
5/27/2009 11:55:15 AM
You mentioned "commons"--are you familiar with "The Tragedy of Commons," Willy Nilly?
5/27/2009 12:32:47 PM
5/27/2009 1:02:31 PM