In a Communist society only the collective of the proletariat (i.e. all of the workers as a community) can own property. Individual or company property ownership is abolished.
Yes.
Yes, but with restrictions and limitations. And it is Britain.
Yeah contry have some restriction for it, so it hard to compare.
No, private citizens in China are not permitted to own guns. There are reports of private citizens who do own them, but this is done illegally.
"The type of communism practiced under Stalin did not benefit the people." "China turned to communism as an alternative to internal power struggles." "As a form of society, communism does not allow an individual to reap the fruits of his own labor."
In a democracy people have the right to choose whether or not to own. In communism, no-one has the right to own as ownership of everything is collective.
They are owned by the State.
communism
No. Communism is a belief system. Some countries have a Communistic-style government, and each country has its own leader.
Because of human nature. Communism expects you to act against our own best interests by toiling for the common good and being happy with whatever scraps and mediocre subsistence they allow you. Instead of opportunity, where you have the chance to pursue a dream or a private life, you get to spend your life slaving away with no opportunity. Usually, under communism, what they dole out to the citizens is vastly inadequate and of low quality. Supply chain mismanagement, hunger, shortages, and worse are common in communism. The only people in a communist scheme who live enjoyably are the power brokers at the top of the government's power structure. Unless you're born into it or appointed by them, you don't get any...
No, the UK don't allow out of country adoptions with it's citizens. A 16yo in the UK can move out and live in his own according to the law.
Three things that a citizen could do in ancient Rome that we also do today are: to own property, to appeal a death sentence, and to make a will.