Aizle wrote:
There are elements of personal rights within property rights, but they are not the same. To make them the same would be to say that if you have a choice between saving a child or a priceless car from a fire, either choice would be valid.
It is merely your opinion that these choices are not equally valid. In order to make this determination, you've placed certain moral imperatives higher than others. Having the opinion that those imperatives are higher than other imperatives does not invalidate the opinion of individuals who disagree and would choose a different or even inverse balance of moral imperatives.
The difference, generally speaking, is that based upon (my perception of) your chosen balance of imperatives, you strip individuals of liberty in choice.
RangerDave wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
Personal rights ARE property rights, property rights ARE personal rights. They are inseparable. I cannot infringe on your property without infringing on your control of your own past present or future.
Khross wrote:
All personal rights stem from the notion of self-ownership. Have you ever read Locke or Smith or Jefferson?
This is the core of my disagreements with you guys and with many libertarians generally. I don't believe ownership of self and ownership of property are equivalent concepts or that personal rights are derived from a property right in oneself. Rather, I reverse that order - I think personal rights - control over one's body and mind - are primary and property rights are lesser derivatives thereof. This approach makes conceptual sense, in that an external object has a separate existence from it's "owner", whereas the self does not, so no true equivalency between self and object is possible. A sense of ownership in an object exists only to the extent a person becomes emotionally invested in it. This approach also corresponds to actual human experience in that people generally value themselves more highly than their possessions. Just as any mammal tends to favor self-preservation over territoriality when pressed, humans will generally answer the question, "Your money or your life?" the same way.
Is your property an extension of yourself, given that it typically takes time, effort, or some other aspect of your life to acquire property? Presuming that it does indeed take time, effort, or some other aspect of your life to acquire property, why should other individuals be able to dictate the usage of that property, thereby over-riding your individual autonomy? The only justifiable circumstance in which they may do so would be for that usage to cause immediate infringement of their own health (including life itself), livelihood (property/ability to acquire property), and/or individual autonomy.
Therefore, provided that one's usage of property does not cause said infringement, it should fall under individual autonomy and be considered an equal right as any "personal" rights.