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WHAT IS A RIGHT?
Fatal Blindness (FR archives) ^ | 06/14/99 | Fulton Huxtable

Posted on 08/31/2003 9:27:09 AM PDT by NMC EXP

A right is the sovereignty to act without the permission of others. The concept of a right carries with it an implicit, unstated footnote: you may exercise your rights as long as you do not violate the same rights of another—within this context, rights are an absolute.

A right is universal—meaning: it applies to all men, not just to a few. There is no such thing as a "right" for one man, or a group of men, that is not possessed by all. This means there are no special "rights" unique to women or men, blacks or white, the elderly or the young, homosexuals or heterosexuals, the rich or the poor, doctors or patients or any other group.

A right must be exercised through your own initiative and action. It is not a claim on others. A right is not actualized and implemented by the actions of others. This means you do not have the right to the time in another person’s life. You do not have a right to other people’s money. You do not have the right to another person’s property. If you wish to acquire some money from another person, you must earn it—then you have a right to it. If you wish to gain some benefit from the time of another person’s life, you must gain it through the voluntary cooperation of that individual—not through coercion. If you wish to possess some item of property of another individual, you must buy it on terms acceptable to the owner—not gain it through theft.

Alone in a wilderness, the concept of a right would never occur to you, even though in such isolation you have the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. In this solitude, you would be free to take the actions needed to sustain your life: hunt for food, grow crops, build a shelter and so on. If a hundred new settlers suddenly arrive in your area and establish a community, you do not gain any additional rights by living in such a society nor do you lose any; you simply retain the same rights you possessed when you were alone.

A right defines what you may do without the permission of those other men and it erects a moral and legal barrier across which they may not cross. It is your protection against those who attempt to forcibly take some of your life’s time, your money or property.

Animals do not have rights. Rights only apply to beings capable of thought, capable of defining rights and creating an organized means—government—of protecting such rights. Thus, a fly or mosquito does not possess rights of any kind, including the right to life. You may swat a fly or mosquito, killing them both. You do not have the right to do the same to another human being, except in self-defense. You may own and raise cows, keep them in captivity and milk them for all they are worth. You do not have the right to do the same to other men, although that is what statists effectively do to you.

There is only one, fundamental right, the right to life—which is: the sovereignty to follow your own judgment, without anyone’s permission, about the actions in your life. All other rights are applications of this right to specific contexts, such as property and freedom of speech.

The right to property is the right to take the action needed to create and/or earn the material means needed for living. Once you have earned it, then that particular property is yours—which means: you have the right to control the use and disposal of that property. It may not be taken from you or used by others without your permission.

Freedom of speech is the right to say anything you wish, using any medium of communication you can afford. It is not the responsibility of others to pay for some means of expression or to provide you with a platform on which to speak. If a newspaper or television station refuses to allow you to express your views utilizing their property, your right to freedom of speech has not been violated and this is not censorship. Censorship is a concept that only applies to government action, the action of forcibly forbidding and/or punishing the expression of certain ideas.

Statists have corrupted the actual meaning of a right and have converted it, in the minds of most, into its opposite: into a claim on the life of another. With the growth of statism, over the past few decades, we have seen an explosion of these "rights"—which, in fact, have gradually eroded your actual right to your life, money and property.

Statists declare you have a "right" to housing, to a job, to health care, to an education, to a minimum wage, to preferential treatment if you are a minority and so on. These "rights" are all a claim, a lien, on your life and the lives of others. These "rights" impose a form of involuntary servitude on you and others. These "rights" force you to pay for someone’s housing, their health care, their education, for training for a job—and, it forces others to provide special treatment for certain groups and to pay higher-than-necessary wages.

Under statism, "rights" are a means of enslavement: it places a mortgage on your life—and statists are the mortgage holders, on the receiving end of unearned payments forcibly extracted from your life and your earnings. You do not have a right to your life, others do. Others do not have a right to their lives, either, but you have a "right" to theirs. Such a concept of "rights" forcibly hog-ties everyone to everyone else, making everyone a slave to everyone else—except for those masters, statist politicians, who pull the strings and crack the whips.

Actual rights—those actions to which you are entitled by your nature as man—give you clear title to your life. A right is your declaration of independence. A statist "right" is their declaration of your dependence on others and other's dependence on you. Until these bogus "rights" are repudiated, your freedom to live your life as you see fit will continue to slowly disappear.


TOPICS: Philosophy
KEYWORDS: rights; statism
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To: NMC EXP
Good post, thanks. I would've continued in the discussion, but it seemed to be heading for an argument over whether or not rights are granted by a god. I chose not to spend time on that.
21 posted on 08/31/2003 1:17:46 PM PDT by LiberationIT
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To: KrisKrinkle
KrisKrinkle said:
"Civil rights (the right to vote, trial by jury, etc) These exist in a state of society and are dependant upon the society which has been established. "

KrisKrinkle also said:
"Maybe problems regarding statism arise when people deviate from the original terms of the contract. Anybody who doesn't feel obligated by the contract is of course free ignore it and do as they wish but they should also be ready to suffer consequences imposed by those who believe they have a property right in the society and do not wish it to be violated."

I think you are right on here.

I, for example, have withdrawn my consent to be governed due to infringements of my right to keep and bear arms.

So far, none of my actions have been criminal, but I reserve without ethical qualms to right to fight tyranny. As the number of us who also withdraw our consent grows, this will become more important to the future of our nation.

Some people find the "Free State Project" to be rather humorous. I see it as a beginning of the process of withdrawing consent. If our nation wishes to avoid the type of break-up which happened to the Soviet Union, then the nation must return to the Constitution which was established with the consent of the governed.

22 posted on 08/31/2003 1:43:31 PM PDT by William Tell
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To: Sam Cree
I am a retired Army officer (artillery, MI, and chaplain). I have the privilege of teaching several classes in Colorado Springs to high school, college, and adults on comparative worldviews (biblical vs secular). As I read the various threads, some impress me as good for illustrating different worldviews. So, using some Army terminology, I mark "incidents" as "SPOTREPS" (spot report) and "descriptions of the current world scene" as "SITREPs" (situation reports). INTREP (Intelliegence Report) provides information of an event involving those of the "opposition;" INTSUM (Intelligence Summary) provides more general information. When I get home, I download these SPOTREPs and SITREPs to a database for future use.

Does that help?

BTW - "spooky" - "intel" - cute

23 posted on 08/31/2003 2:32:13 PM PDT by LiteKeeper
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To: Cultural Jihad
CJ ... Is this the same source you once used for your "right to be sad" joke?
24 posted on 08/31/2003 2:38:54 PM PDT by tpaine ( I'm trying to be Mr Nice Guy, but politics keep getting in me way. ArnieRino for Governator!)
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To: LiteKeeper; All
http://cparkansas.org/Is%20it%20a%20Right.htm

There is one that does a good job of delineating what is, and is not, a right.
25 posted on 08/31/2003 2:40:48 PM PDT by Ahban
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To: William Tell; Cultural Jihad
Some people find the "Free State Project" to be rather humorous. I see it as a beginning of the process of withdrawing consent. If our nation wishes to avoid the type of break-up which happened to the Soviet Union, then the nation must return to the Constitution which was established with the consent of the governed.
22 -WT-



Well said bump:


But be carefull.. That kind of talk can make people sad. Some here ~insist~ upon their right to happiness.
26 posted on 08/31/2003 2:45:55 PM PDT by tpaine ( I'm trying to be Mr Nice Guy, but politics keep getting in me way. ArnieRino for Governator!)
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To: Consort
In many real ways Freedom of Speech is a myth because it has been negated by other laws of the land.

An unalienable right may be denied but doesn't it still exist?

Regards

J.R.

27 posted on 08/31/2003 4:34:05 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: AEMILIUS PAULUS
When everyone has "Rights" then nobody has "Rights." "Rights" exist only inter pares.

Rights exist only "between peers"?

While in actual practice the ruling aristocracy has more rights than me, is that the way it is supposed to be from Constitutional and moral standpoints?

Regards

J.R.

28 posted on 08/31/2003 4:37:34 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority
A "right" is whatever an unelected, unaccountable federal judge says it is. The Constitution was supposed to protect certain basic rights but the judges have negated that.

And now the prohibition of the public display of the Ten Commandments is considered to be protecting the "free exercise thereof [religion].

Only in Amerika.

Regards

J.R.

29 posted on 08/31/2003 4:41:12 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: varon
Wish someone would 'splain this to all politicians before they run for office

The fiction of "group rights" is one of the major problems with this country.

Regards

J.R.

30 posted on 08/31/2003 4:42:46 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: Tinman
Classic indeed. Thanks for bringing this one back.

Unfortunately Fulton Huxtable's website, "Fatal Blindness" went dark a couple of months ago.

The original article for this post is from the FR archives. This piece was posted several times and it is worth a look to follow some of the old discussions.

You will see some familar names.

Regards

J.R.

31 posted on 08/31/2003 4:46:23 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: dark_lord
Bottom line: no God, no rights -- just revokable privileges that happen to be called rights.

I know several libertarians and objectivists who are of the atheist persuasion who would not only disagree with you but would prove their point in debate.

You'll just have to take my word for it. Most are banned.

Regards

J.R.

32 posted on 08/31/2003 4:50:30 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: KrisKrinkle
Civil rights and legal rights are not universal. For instance, those who are not citizens may not have the right to vote in national elections.

I believe the author only referred to natural rights.

Perhaps that's a matter of interpretation. If another person or other people infringe on my rights or fail in any obligation they have to me, I might have a right to their life, money, property or time and I may use coercion in regard to that right.

The libertarian "non agression principle" does cover self defense if someone initiates an act of agression against you. I believe Huxtable covers that in another essay.

While it's true that the actual meaning of a right has been corrupted, it is also true that people may have claims on each others lives by virtue of what for lack of a better term could be called a social contract.

I disagree. One person's need can never constitute a claim on the resources of another. We can have purely voluntary social obligations to address the needs of another but that cannot constitute a right.

Maybe problems regarding statism arise when people deviate from the original terms of the contract.

When people fail to fulfill their social obligations to family and neighbors the state is ready and willing to step in by claiming the needs of the poor do constitute a claim on the resources of the rest.

Regards

J.R.

33 posted on 08/31/2003 5:00:59 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: Voice in your head
Aren't legal barriers due to laws, rather than rights?

In an ideal world all laws would conform to natural rights hence no contradiction.

Is this a contradiction? Why or why not?

No.

Animals do not have rights. Rights apply only to the interactions of men. A solitary man cannot violate the rights of another, or have his rights violated.

Regards

J.R.

34 posted on 08/31/2003 5:07:53 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: Cultural Jihad
From the propensities and needs of human nature we recognize the State as resting on a Divine ordinance; only in the State can man support himself and develop according to his nature. But, if the Divine Creator of Nature has willed the existence of the State, He must also will the means necessary for its maintenance and the attainment of its objects. This will can be found only in the right of the State to demand from its members what is necessary for the general good.

And in a later post you troll with the comment to me that "Fatal Blindness is an apt name".

You posting of this Roman Catholic prescription for the symbiosis of the church and the state must mean that you agree with it.

As to the section I highlighted first, states do not have rights -- they have powers. Second, the state "demanding from it's members....for the general good" is the opinion that has resulted in the current welfare state.

Something you have no problem with I am sure. After all, you are merely a republican and not a conservative.

Regards

J.R.

35 posted on 08/31/2003 5:23:01 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: NMC EXP
1. An aristocracy must be recognized, have legitimacy if you please. It does not necessarily have to be registered in a 'Handbuch Des Goetha" to be legitimate. Washington, Jefferson, Madison and Monroe come to mind. They individually and collectively certainly approached and probably were an aristocracy. Landed, trained from youth to command and did command etc.

2. Participation in government must be limited. Voting rights were extended only to those having property above a certain value.

3. Exclusion, 'those who do not belong.' Criminals, vice addicts etc.

There are other elements which would be tiresome to list and read. Members of the above have rights and only towards each other and others of like qualification.

What I have described is close to what really was. Those attitudes are very alien today.

36 posted on 08/31/2003 5:24:51 PM PDT by AEMILIUS PAULUS (Further, the statement assumed)
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To: Sam Cree
True rights protect us *from* the state.

Thats the way the founders meant it to be. Of course the road to hell is paved with good intentions.

Nice to see you again.

Regards

J.R.

37 posted on 08/31/2003 5:25:06 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: agitator
If I, as an individual natural person, have no inherent authority to compel another individual natural person to pay me in order to travel by car, how is it my agent in govt. can have that authority?

You answered your own question:

...the only party capable of diminishing your natural rights is a thug...

But you knew that.

Regards

J.R.

38 posted on 08/31/2003 5:28:47 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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To: NMC EXP

We really need to add this Constitutional Amendment !!!

ARTICLE XI

You have No Right to change our country's history or heritage !!! This free country was founded upon the belief in One True God !!! Still, you are given the freedom to believe in any religion, any faith, or no faith at all; with no fear of being persecuted !!! The Ten Commandments and the phrase "In God We Trust" are very important parts of our heritage and history, but if you happen to feel uncomfortable with that... TOUGH SHEET !!!

.

39 posted on 08/31/2003 5:30:50 PM PDT by GeekDejure
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To: LiberationIT
I would've continued in the discussion, but it seemed to be heading for an argument over whether or not rights are granted by a god. I chose not to spend time on that.

That question has been the source of good debates.

Regards

J.R.

40 posted on 08/31/2003 5:30:54 PM PDT by NMC EXP (Choose one: [a] party [b] principle.)
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