Diamondeye wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
Taskiss wrote:
It takes some kind of governance to establish order if that behavior is to be discouraged.
Unless you are also stating that, by necessity or definition, it takes a Government to perform that governance, I'd be inclined to agree. I believe people should govern themselves first and foremost.
Yes, but we have ample evidence that significant numbers of people will not.
The real issue isn't whether rights are inherent or not; it largely doesn't matter. They aren't like laws of physics; not respecting them has no inherent consequences. Calling someone who doesn't respect your rights immoral is not likely to be much of a deterrent to them, especially when there's no benefit in being moral beyond consistency with the moral system of inherent rights for its own sake.
The real issue is what sort of government allows the most citizens to
exercise the most rights, regardless of where they come from.
If all the government does is say "ok, we're going to stop those guys from the other side of the mountain from coming over here and stabbing you to death" that's an improvment over when those guys could come stab you. If the government then says "Ok, while we're at it, we're going to make sure you can freely express your opinion on how to go about stopping those assholes, no matter what it is." That's better still.
The real problem occurs when those people that don't really believe the stabby guys actually want to stab anyone start claiming that we shouldn't do
anything to stop them, and the people who are afraid of getting stabbed want them to not say that. When one of those groups starts telling the other one they can't have the right they care about.. we have trouble.
You know, I was going to argue with you in sound bites, and take each sentence as a separate statement. The I read the whole thing, and, on the whole, I agree.
The only argument I'll offer is to:
Quote:
They aren't like laws of physics; not respecting them has no inherent consequences.
Not respecting the rights of myself and those I love
does carry inherent consequences. As I'm sure they do for you and yours.
Monte wrote:
DE - I'm using Society as something interchangeable with government. Really, Government is a part of our Society. Without it, we don't have much of a society. Our society includes the collective establishment and defense of these things we call "rights". Without our society (and government, or government, whatever) those rights are just so much vapor.
There you go again conflating government with society, and the collective with individuals.
See, I'm not a part of your "society" even though I grew up within 45 minutes of you. I'm not part of your "collective", despite the fact that our mothers were the one's who paid the bills on a lower middle-class income. It might be that my mother
chose to
work to be preeminent in her field, despite no one granting her privilege, cash, or credit for her work. Maybe it's because I never had someone to write a check in an attempt to give me the opportunities my mother couldn't afford. It might be my reality is one that is derived from my own work and choices, and yours is derived from blaming grandpa with the check book. You are responsible for all you have done in what is rapidly approaching 40 years on this planet. As much as you choose to blame and curse those who have it better, what really belittles
you, is the fact that you haven't been able to do it yourself. I don't blame you for your youthful experiences; maybe if if Grandpa had just given just a little bit more...
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko