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We may all be missing the boat, by not raising Corrientes!
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<blockquote data-quote="HDRider" data-source="post: 1708922" data-attributes="member: 17025"><p>Compare it to this.</p><p></p><div style="margin-left: 20px">The Right to Roam is an ancient custom that allows anyone to wander in open countryside, whether the land is privately or publicly owned. In countries such as Norway, Sweden, Estonia and Scotland it has existed as a common right, a defining concept of nationhood, and has only recently been codified into law. Central to all versions of it across Europe is that: 1) there are sensible, listed exceptions and modifications to this right; and 2) this right only comes with strict responsibilities to both the ecology and community of an area.</div> <div style="margin-left: 20px"></div> <div style="margin-left: 20px">The Right to Roam is really just a definition of private property that is different to England. There are still major landowners in Norway, Counts in Sweden, Lords in Scotland who own many hundreds of thousands of acres. Their ownership of the land, however, while it allows them to take rent, mine and make money from the land, does not include the right to exclude every other member of the public. In these countries, the Right to Roam is considered so important to the health and mental well-being of a nation, that it supercedes that peculiarly English stipulation of property: the right to exclude. Instead, every person has a right to explore these vast open spaces, to sleep there, to kayak, swim, climb, ride horses and cycle.</div> <div style="margin-left: 20px">[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.righttoroam.org.uk/[/URL]</div></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HDRider, post: 1708922, member: 17025"] Compare it to this. [INDENT]The Right to Roam is an ancient custom that allows anyone to wander in open countryside, whether the land is privately or publicly owned. In countries such as Norway, Sweden, Estonia and Scotland it has existed as a common right, a defining concept of nationhood, and has only recently been codified into law. Central to all versions of it across Europe is that: 1) there are sensible, listed exceptions and modifications to this right; and 2) this right only comes with strict responsibilities to both the ecology and community of an area.[/INDENT] [INDENT][/INDENT] [INDENT]The Right to Roam is really just a definition of private property that is different to England. There are still major landowners in Norway, Counts in Sweden, Lords in Scotland who own many hundreds of thousands of acres. Their ownership of the land, however, while it allows them to take rent, mine and make money from the land, does not include the right to exclude every other member of the public. In these countries, the Right to Roam is considered so important to the health and mental well-being of a nation, that it supercedes that peculiarly English stipulation of property: the right to exclude. Instead, every person has a right to explore these vast open spaces, to sleep there, to kayak, swim, climb, ride horses and cycle.[/INDENT] [INDENT][URL unfurl="true"]https://www.righttoroam.org.uk/[/URL][/INDENT] [/QUOTE]
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We may all be missing the boat, by not raising Corrientes!
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