blackshoe, on 2013-January-24, 17:39, said:
No it doesn't. Governments don't have rights. People have rights. Also, rights are individual. Groups don't gain rights because they're a group (government or otherwise), each member retains his individual rights.
This is classic libertarianism.
Individuals have bodies. They, most of them, have brains, and eyes, and feet and so on. I've never seen anything that looked like a 'right' in any anatomy book. I guess the 'rights' are tucked in with the equally intangible soul so many claim to have.
Rights are not 'real' objects. They are intangible. They have meaning only to the extent that others recognize them: they are purely social structures.
There is no 'right' that has any existence or utility in a society of one. A person cast away on a desert island has no 'rights' nor any need for such 'rights'.
What we term 'rights' are behavioural rules that serve to provide individuals with protection from or privilege over other members of society or other organs of society.
Government is also a social structure...again, imagine a society of one...it cannot have a government and has no need nor use for one.
A right exists when society agrees that it should exist, and it ceases to exist whenever society says it ceases to exist.
Japanese-Americans (and Japanese-Canadians ...edited...I mistyped the first time) had 'rights' when WWII broke out, but those rights didn't help much when the rest of society decided that it was better that they not have them anymore.
Negroes didn't have any 'right' not to be slaves in the southern US until society chose to grant them that 'right', and the resulting dispute over 'states' rights' almost destroyed the country. Btw, if only individuals have rights, how can there be such widespread conservative support for states' rights in the US?
Government is not some alien lifeform imposed on us from above. Government arises from society. It is imperfect, no matter what form it takes. Democracies can trample the rights of minorities (see above), and can end up being effectively controlled by the plutocrats...see the US and, tho its democratic credentials may be suspect, Russia). Totalitarian regimes are even worse, since they tend to be more explicitly brutal to more of their citizens than would be possible in a notional democracy, and they are more arbitrary.
But the point is that rights are the product of society and government is the product of society. The former become meaningless without the protection afforded by the latter.
It seems to me that the rights of which libertarians speak are idealized creations of the mind, sort of like platonic ideals. However, unlike platonic ideals, the 'rights' of which they speak somehow all seem to end up affording the libertarian a privileged position in the real world, while allowing them to ignore or minimize the concept of a social obligation.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari