I'm not a communist, I'm an anarchist, but I'll answer your question all the same. When you talk about individual property rights you are talking about the rights of some individuals at the expense of others.
I disagree. If I get paid and then spend my money on something, I've earned it, and it belongs to me - its not stolen from anyone else. I've converted my labour into cash, and then into property. Nobody has the right to take that property from me any more than they can force me to labour for them for free. If owning something is a crime, then eating and drinking must be crimes too, because putting anything in your mouth means you've taken it for yourself.
The French anarchist Pierre Joseph Proudhon said, in 1840, "Property is theft!" and what he meant by that was if, for example, I need a place to live and have little money, I will have to rent a house- and this means that someone is exploiting my basic need, shelter, by forcing me to pay him for it. That's downright authoritarian.
I disagree with this also. I don't know anybody who advocates true capitalism. Of course there should be alternatives for people who have nowhere else to turn, but it would be wrong to stop someone offering to loan someone their property in return for money.
If I work for someone I will have to submit to their commands because they "own" the business.
Yes, this is fair, because you're working
for someone. They offer you money for your labour, because they need a task performed. Nobody is going to pay you to come in and do what you like. It's a place of work, not a holiday park.
I will have to accept the wages they give me
Only if you accept the job.
even though wages do not represent how much work you do- they represent how much money the employer has to pay you in order for you to keep working there.
Your labour might not be worth as much to them as it is to you. If that's the case, you could try something else. They shouldn't be forced to pay you more than you're skills are worth.
If they could they would pay you nothing.
Of course, if free labour was available they'd make use of it. If someone offered you a free car, would you turn it down?
It's a one-sided, parasitic relationship.
I disagree. You work and you get paid. If you don't like it you can try something else.
But because one of my most basic human needs, the ability to feed and clothe myself, is only attainable through working for someone else under capitalism, I have no choice. That sounds pretty dictatorial as well.
In a commune you don't work for yourself either, you work for everybody else. What would happen in your commune if you decided not to work? I would rather have a choice of employers than have that decision forced on me.
Under capitalism, if I do not own anything I can sell I will have to sell myself, my body, to someone who does own property.
Again, I don't know anyone advocating total capitalism.
It is another form of slavery,
Nobody is forcing you to work for a specific employer.
and actually a more efficient form for the bosses because they no longer have to cook for you, clothe you, or house you.
They do indirectly, because they pay you, which you can then then spend on food, shelter, clothes, etc. If they did provide those things for you, you would have no choice. They would pick what you wear, or what you eat, or where you live. That sounds far worse to me. My wages give me the choice to convert my labour into specific things that I want, not what I get as handouts.
I think you believe in liberty- that's good, so do I. If you do believe in liberty why do you support this new form of slavery where some people must work for others?
I don't support slavery, I support capitalism.
If I moved to a communist country and decided not to work, hoping for a free ride, I would hope the result would be the same. Though, I wonder how their government would solve that - maybe, put them in prison where they get food and shelter anyway?
As far as your original question- if by individual property rights you mean a family with a farm, a craftsman working out of his own house, a self-employed computer programmer doing his thing- that's fine. We would let them be and even help them if they needed it. The anarcho-syndicalists of Catalonia respected the right of individual farmers to be left alone.
I meant anyone with any kind of private property, including "stuff".
All anarchist communes and cooperatives would be voluntary efforts that would encourage by example- these cooperatives would have no bosses and would decide what to do on a democratic and participatory basis- we would hope that people would like the idea and try it themselves.
I admire that, because too many people want to force change on others. Just for the record I would have nothing against voluntary communist communes either, as long as nobody forced me to live in one.
However, if you talk of a larger business enterprise where people worked not for themselves but for other people, the tyrannical slavery I talked of earlier, we would assume that no worker, given the choice between working for a boss and being hungry all the time or working without a boss with others on an equal footing (or alone) would choose the boss.
I would choose the boss, because I like being given money in return for my labour. My own personal money gives me a certain amount of power, which allows me to get what I want. I'm not just talking about property though, it could allow me to travel (for example).
I don't know what you would use for currency (if any). How do convert the work you do into the things you want? Do you have to put requests in to the community at large for the specific rewards you want? If I wanted my own PC for reasons of privacy (if I wanted to chat to friends on the net, and send/receive photo's) would the community get me one? Or, would I be restricted to a communal PC, where everyone might have access to my messages and pictures?
What if a member has family or friends abroad and wants to visit them? If they can't save up their own money for a plane ticket, how will the community help them get there, and what will they do for food and shelter when they arrive? Rely on the charity of their relatives? What if they want to visit a place where they don't know anybody?
Also, work without a boss doing what exactly? What kind of lifestyle are you talking about? Is there no kind of authority of any kind? No experts giving the orders? Who decides who does what, or is it a free-for-all? What if vital tasks aren't being performed? Do you bring in workers from outside, or force community members to do it? If you bring the labour in, what is their incentive?
Fast forward a generation or two...What if your young people want to leave because they don't like it? How can they move into another society with no way of supporting themselves? What would your old people do with nobody to do the chores?
People would simply refuse to work for the capitalists. We wouldn't need to opress them or anything, just refuse to be their slaves.
And there will be rainbows, and rivers of chocolate... I would feel more like a slave in a commune to be honest.