blackshoe, on 2012-February-14, 16:06, said:
And here we have one of the fundamental problems in discussing "rights". First we have to establish some basic agreements, and I don't think we (everybody here, not just you and I, Barry) agree on much in this area.
Some questions:
1. What is a "right"?
2. From where do rights come?
3. If rights are "given" to us, presumably they can be taken away. Who can do that?
4. Are rights an individual thing, or do collectives have rights as well?
5. If collectives have rights, do they have rights that individuals don't have? Why or why not?
6. What are these "collective only" rights?
7. What is the moral basis for suggesting that a group ("The State", "the public") has the right to constrain individual rights?
8. Do all groups have such rights, or only some?
9. How do you tell the difference?
I think we have to come up with a theory of rights that doesn't put one group's, or one person's rights at risk just because some other group or person wants something or wants to do something.
It always seems to me that anyone who claims that we have any 'rights' that are independent of the society in which we live is ignorant of basic realities and basic history.
Yes, there are some gloriously written documents and impassioned speeches declaring that we all have certain rights, inalienable or otherwise, but saying it doesn't make it so.
We have 'rights' only to the extent that the ruling elite in our society are prepared to recognize those rights.
Take the US, for example. It has a wonderful constitution, especially once it was amended to recognize that a black person was actually a real person, equal to a white. It got better when it was amended to reflect that a female was a real person as well.
But the founders, who recognized 'inalienable' rights, didn't recognize them for slaves or for women. If the US was founded as the land of the free, it was a somewhat narrow definition of 'free'.
So: if it is now recognized that a woman has an intrinsic 'right' to vote, why wasn't this obvious to the founding fathers?
If a person has a 'right' not to be a slave, why wasn't this in the original constitution or Bill of Rights?
Were these rights hidden at the time? If they come from a 'god', why did it take so long for these rights to be revealed, and why are so many of the rights that we, in the west, perceive to be 'inalienable' considered to be perversions in so much of the world....see the muslim nations, and see how the untouchables are still treated in Hindi India despite legislative reform?
Rights evolve from the societies in which they exist. They are not inalienable. Heck....read the Orwellian Patriot Act to see how readily a 'free' society can be conned into surrendering its rights by the fiat of the ruling elite.
It also seems to me to be a peculiarly american conceit that rights have power yet obligations do not. In most nations, citizens are seen and see themselves as being in a relationship with their neighbours and with their society as a whole that involves not only a recognition by their neighbours and society of their individual rights but also, and critically, their oligations to their neighbours and their society.
Different societies seem to give rise to different balancing between these factors. Japan seems, for example, to be a society where obligations are viewed as powerful. North Korea is apparently one where individual rights are close to non-existent for the average citizen. The US, at least for the wealthy in the US and, to a lesser degree, the shrinking middle class, seems to be at the opposite end of the spectrum.
But it seems foolish, as well as either naive or wilfully ignorant, to speak of any particular human as having a 'right' to anything independent of society.
So in an attempt to answer your questions:
1.a 'right' is a recognition by our society of our freedom to act in a certain manner
2. rights come from society. They represent the current state of thinking/feeling within society, altho their formal recognition or observance may be delayed by the inertia of the body politic
3. society can do it. In a modern democracy, this involves decision making by the organs of state rule....be that the legislature, the executive or the courts, or (more commonly) some combination of these. Witness the Patriot Act, witness the internment of US and Canadian citizens of Japanese descent in WWII. Where were the inalienable rights of the Nisei then?
4 Collectives can have rights if the society in which they exist determines that such rights are appropriate. Trade Unions can have 'rights' to bargain collectively. Corporations can be recognized as people, and they are a form of collective. Asking the question 'can collectives have rights' reveals a different understanding of 'rights' than I set forth here.
5. see the above. As to why society might recognize 'rights' for collectives, presumably that arises out of a recognition of the social dynamics within the society. Thus unions were recognized as a response to the perception of the majority of society (or the majority of the ruling elite at the time) that the interests of society were best served by creating a counterweight to the power of the wealthy to exploit the lower social classes. While this might have seemed counter to the interests of the wealthy (see Henry Ford in his later years), any student of history knows that unions were accepted by the elite as a concession to avert unrest and civil disobedience. The ruling elite had got out of touch with the increasingly educated masses and this was a relatively rare incident in which a 'right' arose in response to a mass desire that was not inculcated by the ruling elite
6. whatever society recognizes
7. the essence of morality is the psychological makeup of humans, and the benefit to the species of having adopted, in a limited way, a collaborative means of co-existence. Some ingenious studies have shown that basic elements of morality are universal, independent of language, ethnicity, geography and religious or lack of religious belief. Religious people love to claim that religion, and especially their religion, is the source of morality, but that is demonstrably false. Perhaps a more direct answer is that most societies recognize that individuals have obligations as well as rights, and society has the inherent right to require that those obligations be discharged. When a citizen refuses to acknowledge his or her obligation, it may not be possible (and almost certainly won't be desirable) to allow another citizen to enforce the obligation, not least because the refusal may be justified or may be due to an error...maybe the citizen is innocent, and society will usually generate rules (the justice system) to minimize wrongful sanction.
8. This question reflects a different view of rights...see above
9. see above
Btw, i am not a marxist or anything of the sort. When I refer to a ruling elite, I don't mean to suggest that, for example, the top 1% of the US population, in socio-economic terms, is a monolithic element of society nor that there is a secret cabal ruling the US or the world. I mean only that the bulk of those in positions of power come from relatively empowered levels of society. This is as true in the US today as it was in the UK of 150 years ago, and of Rome 2000 years ago, and so on.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari