Do we allow a Chinese company to buy entire neighborhoods, cities, and states worth of real estate?
The East India trading company became so powerful they had absolute leverage over the British empire. They could pretty much kidnap people and enforce them to work for their Navy. They were more powerful than many nations.
Do we just allow Bill Gates to buy up every piece of cattle in the United States and force vax them?
De we allow him to become so powerful that he can just buy up all of the grocery stores, remove all the animal proteins, and forces to eat bugs and processed lab meat?
Foreign entities should never be allowed to buy land in America, under any circumstances.
But, if US citizens want to sell their property to domestic miscreants, like Bill Gates, then that is their legal right to do so. The bigger problems happen when corporations buy large swaths of land, and in effect create real estate monopolies. That's an issue that needs to be tackled with existing laws, or by expanding laws dealing with monopolies, not by infringing on the rights of property sellers.
Do we allow a Chinese company to buy entire neighborhoods, cities, and states worth of real estate?
The East India trading company became so powerful they had absolute leverage over the British empire. They could pretty much kidnap people and enforce them to work for their Navy. They were more powerful than many nations.
Do we just allow Bill Gates to buy up every piece of cattle in the United States and force vax them?
De we allow him to become so powerful that he can just buy up all of the grocery stores, remove all the animal proteins, and forces to eat bugs and processed lab meat?
Foreign entities should never be allowed to buy land in America, under any circumstances.
But, if US citizens want to sell their property to domestic miscreants, like Bill Gates, then that is their legal right to do so. The bigger problems happen when corporations buy large swaths of land, and in effect create real estate monopolies. That's an issue that needs to be tackled with existing laws, or by expanding laws dealing with monopolies, not by infringing on the rights of property sellers.