https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/02/president-trump-absolute-rights/607168/
 
Where Trump derived the idea that as president he enjoys absolute 
rights is unclear. But his chosen phraseology is sticky and evocative. 
It carries a quasi-juridical ring that belies its conceptual 
incoherence. Closely examined, his incessant invocation of the phrase 
evokes the image not of the leader of the free world, but of a 
freeholder enjoying untrammeled and indefinite possession of his estate.
 Constitutionally baseless but rhetorically compelling, the whole 
concept of “absolute rights” is best described as a legal innovation by a
 real-estate mogul who understands power through the prism of private 
property rather than public obligation.
As the owner and developer
 of a sprawling global real-estate empire, Trump, of course, knows a 
thing or two about property. And in the world of property, the best kind
 of ownership is “absolute”—or “perfect”—title. Absolute title grants 
the title holder unequivocal, unchallengeable ownership rights. The 
property is free and clear, to be enjoyed and used by the owner as he 
sees fit. It is encumbered by nothing. The owner is beholden to no one.
 
 
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