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{{anarchism}}
'''Property is theft!''' (]: ''La propriété, c'est le vol!'') is a slogan coined by ] ] in his 1840 book '']''.

{{bquote|If I were asked to answer the following question: ''What is ]?'' and I should answer in one word, ''It is ]!'', my meaning would be understood at once. No extended argument would be required . . . Why, then, to this other question: ''What is ]?'' may I not likewise answer, ''It is ]!'', without the certainty of being misunderstood; the second proposition being no other than a transformation of the first?|||Pierre-Joseph Proudhon|'']''}}
(This translation by ] renders "''c'est le vol''" as "it is robbery," although the slogan is typically rendered in English as "property is theft.")

By "property," Proudhon referred to the ] concept of the ''] of property'' — the right of the proprietor to do with his ] as he pleases, "to use and abuse," so long as in the end lie submits to state-sanctioned title, and he contrasted the supposed ] with the rights (which he considered valid) of ], ], and ].

==Similar phrases==
Brissot de Warville had previously written, in his ''Philosophical Researches on the Right of Property'' (''Recherches philosophiques sur le droit de propriété et le vol''), "Exclusive property is a robbery in nature."<ref name=curiosities>William Shepard Walsh, '''', p. 923</ref> ] would later write that Proudhon had taken the slogan from Warville,<ref>Karl Marx, , from ''Marx Engels Selected Works, Volume 2'', first published in ''Der Social-Demokrat'', Nos. 16, 17 and 18, February 1, 3 and 5, 1865</ref> although this is believed not to be true.<ref>Robert L. Hoffman, ''Revolutionary Justice: The Social and Political Theory of P.J. Proudhon'', (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1972), pp. 46-48.</ref>

] taught ''superfluum quod tenes tu furaris'' (the superfluous property which you hold you have stolen).<ref name=curiosities/>

] wrote {{fix|text=where?}}: "In the last analysis all property is theft."<ref name=curiosities/>

==References==
{{Reflist}}

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