The right of contract. A father/mother wills the property to his son/daughter. This is no different than selling a business. It is disposal of private property and if you take that away then everything is basically public property.
I'm not suggesting it should be abolished to the point where you can't own a farm and keep it in the family. However, if you own tens of thousands of acres of farm land subsidized by the government, employing thousands of people and feeding millions of people, keeping ownership in your family makes you basically a nobleman among peasants. I'm also not pushing an exact set of parameters as to what I think the changes are that need to be made, I am simply suggesting that changes need to be made and am suggesting a direction.
Income inequality exists and socioeconomic upward mobility is rapidly vanishing. I thought socioeconomic upward mobility was the American dream. Wealth redistribution is happening, the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer.
You are continuall repeating property rights, and I have nothing against property rights of well earned folks who have a little more than other people, I am talking about people who have consolidated so much to keep in their bloodlines that they have the power (and in many ways use it) to exercise control over local governments, buy elections, out source jobs, push for legislation that protects their profits at the cost of the way of life of the people who need jobs...I could go on.
There seems to be an idea that it's an employer's world, that suppliers should have the power over the demanders. It seems to me a bad thing that it is acceptable to say, many other people want your job, so I'll pay you less, because they are willing to take less, because I wish to profit. This attitude is reliant upon rabid consumerism in the form of buyers carelessly buying because they don't realize how much power they have over industry. Sure, cakes made by a factory where non-union workers will be cheaper, but the people buying those cakes are telling the world they want factory workers to be paid less. If you think workers should be treated better, given benefits and even have a retirement package that includes tradeable stock, buy cakes from the company that has these policies for it's workers. On the other hand, if continually there is always an ever growing pool of people desperate for employment and a consumer base choosing products based solely on price, things will head in the direction of the last decade, of wealth redistribution into the accounts of the wealthiest from the poorest.
Now if it is simply impossible that a well informed populace could ever be a majority such that reality could begin to resemble utopian visions, than big government and Keynesian economics is the only answer for protecting the people's equality. By equality, I mean equal access to socioeconomic upward mobility.