For better or worse, it's really not. What property is depends on what rules the government sets up to protect and/or regulate it, so if the government is reasonably democratic, the nature and scope of those rules is based on what the people want them to be.
Both the fifth and fourteenth Amendments to the US Constitution provide due process protections for "Life, Liberty, and Property" a reading of any number of founding documents (for the United States) shows clearly that the Founders held property rights to be as important as other human rights...and I agree with them whole heartedly
For better or worse, it's really not. What property is depends on what rules the government sets up to protect and/or regulate it, so if the government is reasonably democratic, the nature and scope of those rules is based on what the people want them to be.
Both the fifth and fourteenth Amendments to the US Constitution provide due process protections for "Life, Liberty, and Property" a reading of any number of founding documents (for the United States) shows clearly that the Founders held property rights to be as important as other human rights...and I agree with them whole heartedly