DFK! wrote:
Discussion of viewpoints on rights are divided in exactly that way: arguing against inherent rights, natural rights, or whathaveyou, one must create communal divides.
Under the construct of "man creates rights", I agree with this.
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In so doing, one precludes (to date) the idea of a world community, as there is no creation of rights at that level, no individual identifies first with the "world community," and no true enforcement exists at that level.
No - not necessarily. You keep saying this, but it is not necessarily true. Aizle certainly doesn't believe that. The UN is nothing more than a "community" of nations. Our country is nothing more than a community of states. A state is nothing more than a community of smaller municipalities, and so on. The smaller you go, the more in common the people have, but at no point does taking another step up make it suddenly invalid.
The UN has certainly established agreed to rights, and enforces them (perhaps not as effectively as it would like).
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Don't get mad at me for an issue inherent to communal rights... in order for there to be communal rights at a level that is X-large, a governing community must exist to establish them. If no such community exists at the X-large size, rights must be communally established at a smaller size. That's all I'm saying.
Why would I be mad? Regardless, you're drawing that line in such a way that could easily be contested.
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Uh... demonstrate this, as I'm relatively sure this is wholly untrue.
See above.
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I really don't know what you're trying to convey with these two points? I'm not limiting any "construct." I'm discussing the nature of communal rights.
The nature of communal rights is pretty straight forward. They are established by [insert group of people here]. They are enforced by the same. It doesn't matter the group, so long as that group is organized enough to make the rules and enforce them. Size only matters in a historical sense, in that a community hasn't existed that's bigger. 2 million years from now, I expect sizes of communities to be larger. The concept can scale with size, provided the group is organized enough to create the rules and enforce them.
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What I'm trying to learn is 1) why Aizle (and others) believe that communal rights and not inherent rights exist,
He stated this fairly clearly a few posts back.
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2) regardless of (1), why Aizle (and others) believe their belief in communal rights is superior to a belief in inherent rights,
I'm not sure he's said that, and I certainly haven't heard anyone else say that. All he's said is that's what he believes. In fact, the only person I've heard say their beliefs are superior is Elmo.
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and 3) determine how Aizle personally can reconcile a belief in communal rights while simultaneously advocate the destruction of another community for his own moral satisfaction.
He didn't say that. However, let's assume two communities: one of protestants and one of cannibals. Both have different views on moral activities. If I was to operate under the assumption that humans make "rights", then both communities are within their rights and are "moral". This is because each community would establish their own morality and rights. When these two communities clash, and the dust settles, the winner would ultimately be able to force their wishes on the others. This would be amoral to the loser up until they were fully assimilated. Then, they would embrace and support the new order.
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As such, until a global enforcement mechanism exists, I don't believe one can reasonably claim any such "rights" are truly being created at the level of a global community.
Perhaps - however, the community (of nations) still made the rights. They just can't enforce them. Theoretically, you can go either way. Practically speaking, you can create whatever you want but it's not particularly important until it can be enforced.
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One could counter-claim, I suppose, that an enforcement mechanism exists but is imperfect, such as the justice system not solving every crime or something. That would be a reasonable claim to make, however, given that groups such as North Korea, the Taliban, and others continue to defy basic WHO, UN, Geneva Convention "rights," on a daily basis, I'd argue that the "might" has not signicantly unified the world into any recognizeable "community."
But, one could then counter again that the rights are created in the areas where the entity is strong enough to enforce them. For example, if the US declared that no slaves should exist anywhere, but could only enforce that in the US, then under the construct those rights would exist in the US only. Likewise, the UN rights would exist in some places, but not North Korea.
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Furthermore, if one believes in and advocates communal rights, while simultaneously advocating for any sort of equality, they logically should not advocate the overthrow of one community's rights/values in favor of another. Again, they might take personal umbrage at a perceived moral violation taking place, but advocating policy that vacates one community in favor of another is merely advocacy of enforced authority, or tyranny.
Unless, of course, it is within their moral construct to do so. Who are you to judge a community as immoral just because their morality tells them to attack others?