I'm from eastern Europe. In the soviet era noone could own private property, everything was belonging to the state. Then, the state rationed food to you, allowed you to use one of their homes in exchange for labour, allowed selling produce on government-controlled prices, and buying in predetermined quantities.
So let me ask a question. When you buy a home with all your life savings, does it become yours? What makes it differ from the soviets? I mean, obviously they recorded your rights to the building on paper, and now they record it in digital databases. But is it REALLY that different? You don't truly own either. It's all the government's promise to let you access it and keep away whomever should not access it, until they don't.
The only thing you truly own is bitcoin. The rest are promises.
Well I get your point and it's a valid one. But the difference between the Soviets and us is simply that we can decide not to labor and your home will still be yours. Yes I believe that no one truly owns a landed property because if the government for any reason needs to use it they can do it. But under the law, you are legally the owner of that portion of land..
Bitcoin is far different from this because we don't need to depend on the government for storage. You literally are in charge of what ever happens to your coins. So if you fail to store it well, you literally would loss it..