I've been considering the concept of rights.
What do you consider your rights, why do you have them, and under what authority?
One kind of rights are the rights governments make that are set out in law, and we have international law regarding rights, as set out in documents such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
[youtube]hTlrSYbCbHE[/youtube]
Rights set out by the government or even the UN, are arbitrarily determined, and only exist because of the consent of the majority of people. There is no reason we should respect the action of government as inherently right, and that any of these supposed 'rights' should be given respect.
What I'm interested in though, is whether there exists a standard of human rights, seperate and independent from popular law?
Or is it the case that, rights are whatever the majority determine? If the majority were in favor of cruel or absurd policy, it becomes a right?
Is it enough to say that because something is better, it should be considered a right?
Ran Prieur says that the current concept of rights are part of the depriving system, and the notion of rights mandated by government are part of, and enforces, an inherently unequal society.
Thoughts?
What do you consider your rights, why do you have them, and under what authority?
One kind of rights are the rights governments make that are set out in law, and we have international law regarding rights, as set out in documents such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
[youtube]hTlrSYbCbHE[/youtube]
Rights set out by the government or even the UN, are arbitrarily determined, and only exist because of the consent of the majority of people. There is no reason we should respect the action of government as inherently right, and that any of these supposed 'rights' should be given respect.
What I'm interested in though, is whether there exists a standard of human rights, seperate and independent from popular law?
Or is it the case that, rights are whatever the majority determine? If the majority were in favor of cruel or absurd policy, it becomes a right?
Is it enough to say that because something is better, it should be considered a right?
Ran Prieur says that the current concept of rights are part of the depriving system, and the notion of rights mandated by government are part of, and enforces, an inherently unequal society.
Against RightsI disagree with the idea of "rights," at least when it means something guaranteed by the state or dispensed by some program. This is a crutch in the worst sense. Rights work against the true interests of the deprived classes by making them depend on the state, an authoritarian structure that uses threats to force people to grudgingly go through the motions of treating each other decently, and that channels these motions through isolating and nightmarish bureaucracies. Or it makes them depend on charity, which reinforces feelings of superiority and inferiority. This is true whether the right is for something like money or something like freedom. Programs that transfer money from the rich to the poor never transfer enough, they make the rich despise the poor, and they make it possible for a system that generates inequality to keep going. The right to free speech is always overruled when speech actually threatens the system, and it leads to disconnected and utterly powerless dissent, where people cop out and say "I despise what you say but I support your right to say it," instead of actually listening to each other. Imagine if, instead of saying "We have a right to be given what we need," we said "We have the power to go and take it!" Or better yet, we have the power to create a society where we don't have all these needs in the first place.
...
A right is always a privilege, if "right" means something that has to be dispensed by some program, and "privilege" means something scarce and supposedly good that's tied into a depriving system. A right is just a privilege that well-meaning shallow-sighted people try to give to everyone. But if we define a "right" as something that's implicit in the basic structure of society, so that everyone has it without anyone making any effort -- clean water because there are no poisons, freedom because there's no authority, equality because there are no means to concentrate wealth or power -- then that's really the opposite of the other kind of "right," and we wouldn't ever have a reason to declare it a right.
Thoughts?