Private and social property
Throughout human history, we have known private and social property. Social property is usually state property, which is primarily managed by politicians, or those party representatives who are currently in power. In addition, we also know corporate property as a form of property of a company, which was established by the founding partners and possibly later also by investors, who elect the director or manager of the company or occupy this position in the company themselves through the majority share of ownership or appoint the manager or director. At first glance, these debates about private and social ownership look quite ridiculous. And perhaps the confusion about ownership management is not just a matter of post-socialist societies and countries where most people have had a hard time weaning themselves off the management of majority state assets. In socialism, there is no private ownership on a large scale, not from factories to real estate and agricultural land. And most of the ad...