Müs wrote:
You liked that word, did you?
Hopwin, a better jumping off point, if you, like me, have a hard time accepting the ridiculous concept of inherent rights, is to approach it pragmatically.
Do you believe property rights are an important thing for society? Are they beneficial or detrimental? (overall.) Do you believe "stealing" is possible? Or is it a word that has no meaning to you?
Conversation and debate is pointless without common ground. I suspect, like most people in modern society, you really do believe in private property, whether as a useful and beneficial legal concept granted by government, or as some natural, and inherent thing. Once you accept the idea of property ownership being a right, then you've got the common ground needed to have the discussion regardless of whether you accept the idea of inherent rights. Hey, two of the glade's most extreme libertarian types disagree strongly on abortion. We used to joke that once Rynelmostan was formed, Elmo and Rynar would attempt to kill each other in a civil war over the matter. Looking at any one person's exact ideology as representative of the concept as a whole is silly. I'm a little bit libertarian in my views, and yet I see rights as just a human legal construct, nothing more.
Hopwin wrote:
Taly, you said the founding fathers believed in these natural rights. If these rights are indeed natural and flowing from the hearts of all mankind why then did they need to be codified and stated in the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights?
Because they were full of ****? I thought I made that clear.