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Daily Inspiration Quote by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon

"Property is theft"

About this Quote

A grenade of a sentence, "Property is theft" works because it hijacks the moral vocabulary of the courtroom and turns it on the comfortable. Proudhon isn’t playing word games for shock value; he’s trying to make bourgeois order sound like a crime scene. If theft is taking what isn’t yours, then the provocation is this: how did “yours” get established in the first place, and who was excluded when the fence went up?

The intent is narrower than the slogan’s afterlife suggests. Proudhon is not claiming that owning a coat or a chair makes you a bandit. He’s targeting property as an institution of exclusive control over land, capital, and the means of production - ownership that lets someone extract rent, interest, or profit without labor. The subtext is a reversal of legitimacy: the state’s legal paperwork doesn’t purify the original act of appropriation; it launders it. Law becomes less a neutral referee than the stamp that converts force and historical accident into “rights.”

Context matters: mid-19th century France, a society ricocheting between revolution and restoration, with industrialization sharpening the divide between those who work and those who own. Socialist thought was battling both monarchist hierarchy and liberal sanctification of the market. Proudhon, an early anarchist, aims to split “possession” (use, occupancy, mutual agreement) from “property” (absolute, enforceable exclusion). The line endures because it compresses an entire critique of capitalism into four words and dares the reader to defend their innocence.

Quote Details

TopicEquality
SourcePierre-Joseph Proudhon, What Is Property? Or, an Inquiry into the Principle of Right and of Government (Qu'est-ce que la propriété?), 1840 — contains the famous line "La propriété, c'est le vol!"
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About the Author

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Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (January 15, 1809 - January 19, 1865) was a Economist from France.

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