He who has no clear inherent right to live somewhere has no right to live at all.
— HORACE GREELEY, Land Reform, Hints Toward Reforms (1850), p. 312.
Consider from the point of view of an observer of Nature a landless man — a being fitted in all his parts and powers for the use of land, compelled by all his needs to the use of land, and yet denied all right to land. Is it not as unnatural as a bird without air or a fish without water?
— HENRY GEORGE, Property in Land, Chap. II., p. 55.
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