Khross wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
"Large enough" Oh how quaint. Appeal to popularity. How many people that aren't you do you feel should be able to enter you into contracts Khross?
There's no appeal to popularity, Elmo. No government exists except by the consent of the governed. That's a simple fact you have issues accepting. I'm more than willing to engage you on the notion of inalienable rights that exist as some sort of cosmic reality, but the truth is: there aren't any. Morality, ethics, rights, and other such intellectual constructs are precisely that -- constructs. Rights, at least as you argue them, are logical abstractions of biological imperatives (for the most part). Life exists. Life has purpose in the larger scope of existence as we know it. Life has purpose in all of its various forms. Consequently, you assume that because a person in born, they have a right to life. You do not, however, follow some particularly stringent Buddhist philosophy that extends the right to life to all living things.
"There's no appeal to popularity, Elmo. No government exists except by the consent of the governed." Now you contradict yourself. It doesn't have consent of the governed if all it takes is a "mutual agreement by a large enough body of people that they choose to establish a governing mechanism". That isn't consent of everyone governed. That is a large enough group to form a system of violence that is large enough to not be stopped by others. I'm pretty sure Pol Pot did not have consent of the governed or even "mutual agreement by a large enough body..." yet it was a government. You're confusing not choosing to rise up to revolution as consent. If a car dealer asks if you want to buy the entire lot and you don't say no - you have not entered into a contract.
Right to life, as all rights, exists for moral actors. If a dolphin can choose good or evil it has rights. Government is not a moral actor. Government has no rights. It has no right to life, no liberty, no right to property or privacy.
The rest of your paragraph is irrelevant. By arguing that states have rights you've already agreed that rights exist.