> As a factor of production, land includes all natural resources. 100% of the input materials used for the production of a hammer are land, and so are 100% of the input materials used for the entire hammer supply chain. If you claim that ownership of land is never legitimate, then how can ownership of a hammer ever be legitimate if it's made of 100% land? Nobody made the iron or the wood in the hammer with their own hands.
No, but the overwhelming majority of the value of the hammer is from human efforts, not from the raw materials. Like yes technically you could say that whoever takes the hammer should have to pay tax on the value of 100g of unrefined iron or whatever, and if we ever reach a point where good iron for the tools that you need for good jobs is so expensive that only the children of rich families are able to hope to own those tools and the rest of us have to rent them at extortionate rates then maybe that would be a policy worth adopting. In theory nothing is 100% land and nothing is 100% product. But in practice you can draw the distinction pretty easily and say which things are scarce enough that taking them out of circulation has an impact on your fellow citizens and which aren't.
No, but the overwhelming majority of the value of the hammer is from human efforts, not from the raw materials. Like yes technically you could say that whoever takes the hammer should have to pay tax on the value of 100g of unrefined iron or whatever, and if we ever reach a point where good iron for the tools that you need for good jobs is so expensive that only the children of rich families are able to hope to own those tools and the rest of us have to rent them at extortionate rates then maybe that would be a policy worth adopting. In theory nothing is 100% land and nothing is 100% product. But in practice you can draw the distinction pretty easily and say which things are scarce enough that taking them out of circulation has an impact on your fellow citizens and which aren't.