I'm not certain I follow you, but it's late. What I'm aiming for is that most basic definition of a fundamental right that we can agree on - a description that we can use to measure whether this or that example is a right or something else.no its the only thing we really know
everything else is individual choices
we can choose as a group for a whole but they are still forced to make the choice
I believe owning property is the same type of right as the right to bear arms. No one has the right to property, but they do have the right to purchase it and keep it once purchased. That's my take. Eminent domain is a concept whose time is past.
I think you're making a leap that's not necessary. If a person has a gun to your head, he has the power of life & death over you. It doesn't matter who loaded the gun, manufactured the bullet, or gave birth to the person. He's got the power now, and can decide what to do with it.
And you have the right to hold that view, without imposing on anyone else to provide, maintain, or share it ... no matter what the majority thinks or what is in the beholder's eye(s).The purpose of this thread is an attempt to prove that health care is not a right, therefore a public option paid for by taxpayers is not legitimate. But rights are all in the eyes of the beholder(s) so really they are subject to majority opinion. There was a time when you were of a certain color, you did not have the right to enter a place of business, sit down and order a meal. That has changed for the better. What I really like is the the term "natural rights", that's a hoot.
Which begs the question why you brought it up.we are not discussing conditions involving enforcement.
we are discussing what should be the grounds for the foundation of fundamental rights.
two differing issues together.
and yet how did eminent domain come into being? who said the government can dish out property for purchase?
then again, who said the government could have power? (the people, i know).
but who gave the people the power to assign power?
if (suppose with me here; i'm not saying this is true) religion (a likely source of the people's power) was invented by the people...
see where i am going here?
we don't have power, neither does the government. we have deluded ourselves into thinking we own that which gave us life and continues (in a decreasing quantity) to give us sustenance (this planet).. yet where did this notion of power evolve from?
The purpose of this thread is an attempt to prove that health care is not a right, therefore a public option paid for by taxpayers is not legitimate. But rights are all in the eyes of the beholder(s) so really they are subject to majority opinion. There was a time when you were of a certain color, you did not have the right to enter a place of business, sit down and order a meal. That has changed for the better. What I really like is the the term "natural rights", that's a hoot.
I think you're confusing power with authority.
We the people give the gov't authority to do certain things but power can be exercised without legitimate authority, that is how dictatorships operate after all.
The power of gov't comes at the tip of the spear. In modern nation states, the gov't has a monopoly of force which it can and does use to force people to comply with its edicts. That is, if you continually defy the edicts and proclamations of your gov't, the ultimate end result is that they will send men with guns to your house and kill you.
Don't believe me, try not paying your income tax for a few years and then when the IRS agents show up to seize your house, fight back and see what happens
I think you're making a leap that's not necessary. If a person has a gun to your head, he has the power of life & death over you. It doesn't matter who loaded the gun, manufactured the bullet, or gave birth to the person. He's got the power now, and can decide what to do with it.
we are not discussing conditions involving enforcement.
we are discussing what should be the grounds for the foundation of fundamental rights.
two differing issues together.
Which begs the question why you brought it up.
Just read the bolded part of your statement.
So, you are fine with granting a group of people the ability to use fear to get what they want, even if it is at the cost of the lives of people who granted such authority||power in the first place?
Sounds a little fucked up.
That's truly scary, especially if you're in the US. Are you?'What is a right?'
It's whatever the government you live under allows you to do.
'What is a right?'
It's whatever the government you live under allows you to do.
Great point. Let's add that to the list.Aye to the above two posters. Rights may be oppressed and repressed by the illegitimate use of gov't power, but they still exist even so...
Though a government can take away or prohibit rights on individual people (through imprisonment, lobotomization, execution, etc) it can't do so at a societal level. If it can, then I don't think it can be considered a right.
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