 |
| Dumb Voter No More . com |
| What Really Goes On In Washington |
| Philosophy of Liberty |
| Where We Went Wrong |
| What We Need To Do |
| Limiting Politicians |
| Democracy vs Freedom |
| Man's Rights |
| The Moral Foundation of a Free Society |
| FOUNDATION of a FREE SOCIETY |
| Good Govt Protects Individual Rights |
| Property and Government |
| Freedom, Individual Rights, Capitalism |
| Bankruptcy of a Mixed Economy |
| FREEDOM and GOVERNMENT |
| Land of Liberty - Society and Government |
| Rewards of Economic Freedom |
| Separation of Economics and State |
| Flat Tax vs Sales Tax |
| Library of Liberty |
| Common Sense Laws |
| What's Wrong With Conservatives |
| FREE MARKETS and LIBERTY |
| The Law and Plunder |
| Politicians, Plunder, Wasteful Spending |
| Constitution and Progressives |
| Learning From Walter Williams |
| POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY -ayn rand |
| Capitalism Center |
| Principles of a Free Society vs The Road to Socialism |
| Government, Capitalism, Welfare |
| Income Inequality - World Poverty |
| Free People Are Not Equal and Equal People Are Not Free |
| Collectivism-Statism-Socialism-Communism |
| FREE TRADE |
| Bloody Politics - Why Socialism Failed |
| Vision of a Free Society |
| Proper Government |
| Foreign Policy |
| Government Spending - Global Capitalism |
| Collectivism vs Individualism |
| Taxes Can Destroy |
| Capitalism and Selfishness |
| Man-Government-Liberty-Tyranny |
| The Basic Issue--Mixed Economy--Seven Principles |
| Individual Rights |
| Life , Liberty , Property |
| Politicians and the Economy |
| Rights and Limited Government |
| Good Sites to Visit |
| Vices and Crimes - A Better Philosophy |
| Immigration |
| Constitutional Primer #7 - Property Rights |
| Right to Own Guns |
| Majority Limited and Pursuit of Happiness |
| POLITICS and FREEDOM |
| The American Revolution - Classical Liberalism |
| Politics and Plunder - Welfare and Charity |
| What Is Money - Seperating Money and State |
| Separating School and State |
| POLITICS - PART 2 |
| Taxes and Property |
| The Anatomy of the State |
| American Government Idea's |
| Good Quotes |
| ABORTION , Questions and Answers |
| Learn Economics Here |
| Three Youngsters Drown |
| INCOME for LIFE |
| OUR LORD'S PROPHECY PREDICTED AND FULFILLED |
| JESUS CAME BACK |
| FUTURISM, FIGURATIVE PRETERISM and LITERAL PRETERISM by W. Hibbard |
| WERE THE APOSTLES FALSE PROPHETS? by M. Fenemore |
| Lee's Bio |
| GUESTBOOK & LINKS |
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"Individual rights are not subject to a public vote; a majority
has no right to vote away the rights of a minority; the political function of rights is precisely to protect minorities from
oppression by majorities (and the smallest minority on earth is the individual)."
www.FreedomKeys.com
The function and purpose of rights is to protect individuals from the encroachment of society and government
in their lives. To protect the individual's life, liberty, property from acts of
encroachment by politicians and society.
A right is something that justly belongs to someone and creates
a claim against those who would deprive one of that right. One person’s right implies an equivalent duty in others not
to interfere unjustly with that right. In terms of these fundamental rights (called “natural rights”), we are
all equal—no one has more and no one less. Different Founding-era documents trace the origins of our rights to
different sources. The Declaration of Independence says that men “are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights,” the Massachusetts Constitution asserts that “all men are born free and equal,” and the Virginia
Declaration of Rights states that “all men are by nature equally free and independent, and have certain inherent rights.”
Whether our rights come from God or nature, the point is the same: They don’t come from government. Government exists
to secure our rights.
Liberty Rights : are rights to act in certain ways , where everyone else has a duty not to
interfere. Welfare Rights : are rights to certain things or services , where certain other people have a duty to provide
these things or services.
When we say that we hold individual rights to be inalienable,
we must mean just that. Inalienable means that which we may not take away, suspend, infringe, restrict or
violate—not ever, not at any time, not for any purpose whatsoever. You cannot say that “man has inalienable
rights except in cold weather and on every second Tuesday,” just as you cannot say that “man has inalienable rights
except in an emergency,” or “man’s rights cannot be violated except for a good purpose.” Either
man’s rights are inalienable, or they are not. You cannot say a thing such as “semi-inalienable” and consider
yourself either honest or sane. When you begin making conditions, reservations and exceptions, you admit that there is something
or someone above man’s rights, who may violate them at his discretion. Who? Why, society—that is, the Collective.
For what reason? For the good of the Collective. Who decides when rights should be violated? The Collective. If this is what
you believe, move over to the side where you belong and admit that you are a Collectivist. LIFE...A “right”
is a moral principle defining and sanctioning a man’s freedom of action in a social context. There is only one
fundamental right (all the others are its consequences or corollaries): a man’s right to his own life. Life is a process
of self-sustaining and self-generated action; the right to life means the right to engage in self-sustaining and self-generated
action—which means: the freedom to take all the actions required by the nature of a rational being for the support,
the furtherance, the fulfillment and the enjoyment of his own life. The right to life means that a man has the
right to support his life by his own work (on any economic level, as high as his ability will carry him); it does not
mean that others must provide him with the necessities of life. LIBERTY...What is the basic, the essential, the
crucial principle that differentiates freedom from slavery? It is the principle of voluntary action versus physical
coercion or compulsion. Freedom, in a political context, means freedom from government coercion. It does
not mean freedom from the landlord, or freedom from the employer, or freedom from the laws of nature which do not
provide men with automatic prosperity. It means freedom from the coercive power of the state—and nothing else. Do not be misled . . . by an old collectivist trick which goes like this: there is no absolute freedom anyway,
since you are not free to murder; society limits your freedom when it does not permit you to kill; therefore, society holds
the right to limit your freedom in any manner it sees fit; therefore, drop the delusion of freedom—freedom is whatever
society decides it is. It is not society, nor any social right, that forbids you to kill—but the inalienable
individual right of another man to live. This is not a “compromise” between two rights—but a line of division
that preserves both rights untouched. The division is not derived from an edict of society—but from your own inalienable
individual right. The definition of this limit is not set arbitrarily by society—but is implicit in the definition of
your own right. Within the sphere of your own rights, your freedom is absolute. PROPERTY...The right to
property means that a man has the right to take the economic actions necessary to earn property, to use it and to dispose
of it; it does not mean that others must provide him with property. The right of free speech means that a man
has the right to express his ideas without danger of suppression, interference or punitive action by the government. It does
not mean that others must provide him with a lecture hall, a radio station or a printing press through which to express
his ideas. HAPPINESS...Observe, in this context, the intellectual precision of the Founding Fathers: they spoke
of the right to the pursuit of happiness—not of the right to happiness. It means that a man has the
right to take the actions he deems necessary to achieve his happiness; it does not mean that others must make him
happy. The Right to the Pursuit of Happiness means man’s right to live for himself, to choose what constitutes
his own private, personal, individual happiness and to work for its achievement, so long as he respects the same right in
others. It means that man cannot be forced to devote his life to the happiness of another man nor of any number of other men.
It means that the collective cannot decide what is to be the purpose of a man’s existence nor prescribe his choice of
happiness.
It is not society or government that forbids
you to ... 1) steal .. it is the person's right to his property
that makes stealing wrong 2) enslave .. it is the person's right to his
liberty that makes slavery wrong 3) murder .. it is the person's right to his life that makes murder wrong Each person's right to - life, liberty, property - makes it wrong
for society or government to encroach upon these rights. No one
has the right to initiate force against another person. But each
person has the right to defend his - life, liberty, property - against those
who initiate force.
The recognition of individual rights implies three things: first, that each man must accept full responsibility for governing his own life; second, that no man should be coerced into sacrificing his liberty or property in order to satisfy someone
else’s needs or wants; and third, that man’s only reciprocal social
obligation is a negative obligation—to not violate the rights of others. This is what it means to
live in a free and civilized society. Noted economist Walter Williams says, Two-thirds
of the federal budget consists of taking property from one American and giving it to another. Were a private person to do
the same thing, we’d call it theft. When government does it, we euphemistically call it income redistribution, but that’s
exactly what thieves do — redistribute income.
It is not only immoral but ineffective as a national
policy.
Two thousand years ago, the Roman statesman Cicero observed that democracies usually choose
a leader “who curries favor with the people by promising them other men’s property.”
George Bernard Shaw said, “A government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always count on the support of Paul.”
And there will always be more Pauls than Peters. So in a democracy, politicians will campaign for the Paul votes, at the expense
of the rights of the productive minority, and the economy will be worse off — as will the majority of Pauls, who will
not experience the job opportunities, better products and services, and other benefits created by the entrepreneurial minority.
What is a right? A right is a gift from God that extends from our humanity. Thinkers from St. Thomas Aquinas,
to Thomas Jefferson, to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., to Pope John Paul II have all argued that our rights are a natural
part of our humanity. We own our bodies, thus we own the gifts that emanate from our bodies. So, our right to life, our right
to develop our personalities, our right to think as we wish, to say what we think, to publish what we say, our right to worship
or not worship, our right to travel, to defend ourselves, to use our own property as we see fit, our right to due process
-- fairness -- from the government, and our right to be left alone, are all rights that stem from our humanity. These are
natural rights that we are born with. The government doesn't give them to us and the government doesn't pay for them
and the government can't take them away, unless a jury finds that we have violated someone else's rights.
What is a good? A good is something we want or need. In a sense, it is the opposite of a right. We have our rights from
birth, but we need our parents when we are children and we need ourselves as adults to purchase the goods we require for existence.
So, food is a good, shelter is a good, clothing is a good, education is a good, a car is a good, legal representation is a
good, working out at a gym is a good, and access to health care is a good. Does the government give us goods? Well, sometimes
it takes money from some of us and gives that money to others. You can call that taxation or you can call it theft; but you
cannot call it a right.
A right stems from our humanity. A good is something you buy or someone else buys for
you.
Now, when you look at health care for what it is, when you look at the US Constitution, when you look at
the history of human freedom, when you accept the American value of the primacy of the individual over the fleeting wishes
of the government, it becomes apparent that those who claim that healthcare is a right simply want to extend a form of government
welfare.
When I make this argument to my Big Government friends, they come back at me with... well, if people
don't have health insurance, they will just go to hospitals and we will end up paying for them anyway. Why should that
be? We don't let people steal food from a supermarket or an apartment from a landlord or clothing from a local shop. Why
do we let them take healthcare from a hospital without paying for it? Well, my Big Government friends contend, that's
charity.
They are wrong again. It is impossible to be charitable with someone else's money. Charity comes
from your own heart, not from the government spending your money. When we pay our taxes to the government and it gives that
money away, that's not charity, that's welfare. When the government takes more from us than it needs to secure our
freedoms, so it can have money to give away, that's not charity, that's theft. And when the government forces hospitals
to provide free health care to those who can't or won't care for themselves, that's not charity, that's slavery.
That's why we now have constitutional chaos, because the government steals and enslaves, and we outlawed that a long time
ago. .. Judge Andrew Napolitano www.lewrockwell.com
The function and purpose of rights is to protect individuals from the encroachment of government in their
lives. If new powers, spending, controls, administrators and authorized use of force enable government to take things from
some people to supply to others with a "right" to them, then no real rights are left to us. www.capitalismmagazine.com What Rights AreWhat does it mean to have rights? A right is an absolute political claim. If you have right
to some land, other people ought to permit you to have it. If you have a right to vote, nobody should prevent you from voting.
If animals have rights, then we mean that no one ought to harm them. Rights are political claims because they pertain to what
the law can or can’t force you to do, and what it can or can’t force others to do for you. Rights
are not a physical property of human beings. They aren’t encoded in your DNA, rooted in your hair follicles, or readable
via an iris-scanner. But they aren’t just a moral fashion statement, either: it’s wrong to say someone has a right
simply to cheer for whatever the right stands for. I think it would be grand if people would travel to Mars. However, that
alone doesn’t give someone a right to travel to Mars. Moreover, if you have a right, you have a right to do
wrong, too. Your right to vote isn’t just a right to vote for good candidates: it’s a right to vote for the bad
ones, too, if that’s your choice. How can you tell a pseudo-right from a real one? In
fact, rights are principles. Properly understood, they are objective moral principles that provide the foundation for a political-legal
order. No law should violate rights. Rights are “self-evident” and “unalienable” because they are
derived from facts about human nature. They are principles defining the fundamental freedoms and responsibilities that people
need to have in society, if we are to live and flourish. Rights pertain to individuals, not groups. They derive
from the basic nature of each individual human. So, they do not pertain directly at the “group” level of, say,
country, tribe, religion, or race, because all those groupings are made up of individuals. Individuals can change the groups
they belong to, but the groups can’t make do without individuals. Most fundamentally, it is individuals who think, act,
and choose, not groups. Moral responsibility lies within individuals first, and with groups only by aggregation. It is individuals
who live and die, suffer or achieve happiness. Find a happy club, town, office, or school, and you’ll find happy individuals
there. Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of HappinessAyn Rand was not the first, nor the last, person to understand the meaning of individual rights. Individual rights are a basic thread
in classical liberalism and libertarianism. But Rand was rights’ clearest, most passionate and most systematic explicator.
Following and expanding on the arguments of John Locke, Rand, like the Founders, understood that individual rights were unitary:
they identify aspects of the freedom one needs to act, if one is to live in harmony with others. The
right to liberty is the right to be free to act as one chooses. Thus “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”
is not a well-meaning but vacuous bromide. It is, in fact, a pretty precise specification. The right to life is the right
not to be killed. It is the right not to be injured or harmed in one’s body. The right to liberty is the right to be
free to act as one chooses. This is crucial to one’s life because it is through one’s productive work that one
gains the goods one needs to maintain one’s life. The right to the pursuit of happiness is the right to aim for independent
goals. This is what seeking happiness consists in, and to succeed in being happy is to succeed in living. PropertyIn
1774, the Continental Congress summarized the three basic rights as “life, liberty, and property” in their Declaration
of Colonial Rights. And well they should have, because without the right to property, no right is worth all that much. If
you have the “right” to your life, but not the right to your own food, you won’t live long. If you have
the “right” to liberty, but are not free to create and own things, then your choices won’t do you much good.
And good luck pursuing happiness if “happiness” is misunderstood to be totally disconnected from any physical
things you might take joy in making; or want for their own sake; or need as means to a valued goal. If
you have the “right” to your life, but not the right to your own food, you won’t live long. Indeed,
what is freedom of speech, if you have no right to own a press, or own a home or hall where you can speak to others, or to
own the means of transmitting your ideas? Such is the travesty of rights-talk today that while all bow before the words “freedom
of speech,” the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (also known as the McCain-Feingold bill) has made it illegal
for most citizens to spend their own money to circulate a political message, beyond certain very narrowly set limits. The
right to property is the basis of industrial civilization. It allows us to live in a society based on trade, where the exchanges
we have are by mutual consent. Property is the basis of a positive sum, “win-win” society, because if you have
a right to your property you gain from every purchase you make or contract you sign—or at least, it is your choice whether
to take part or not in such ventures, and you remain uniquely responsible for yourself. Property Rights Solves
Problems (1) If each parent were given an education voucher to pay for education [or, even better--a tax credit],
those parents wishing prayers, or those against prayers in school, could enroll their children in the school that meets their
preference. Thus, conflict would be eliminated. Of course, a superior solution would be getting government entirely out of
education. (2) Private property would solve the smoking issue. Suppose you owned a restaurant, and you didn't wish
to permit smoking. How would you like it if people used the political system to enact laws that forced you to permit smoking?
I'm sure you'd consider it tyranny, and I'd agree. But there's symmetry. It's just as much tyranny to
use the political system to enact laws to force a restaurant owner who wished to permit smoking to ban smoking. The liberty-oriented
solution might be to post a sign saying you don't permit smoking, and customers wishing otherwise wouldn't enter.
The same principle would apply to restaurant owners who wished to permit smoking. I fear that too many Americans have
contempt for the principles of liberty and opt for solutions that employ the political arena to forcibly impose their wills
on others. If that's the preferred game, then those Americans shouldn't whine when others employ the same tactic to
impose their wills. Take for example , the right of free speech. Freedom of
speech is supposed to mean the right of everyone to say whatever he likes. But the (neglected) question is: Where? Where does
a man have this right? In short, he has this right either on his own property or on the property of someone who has agreed
to allow him on the premises. But he has no right to do it on my property without my permission.
As one who makes decisions over my own life and property, I am
responsible for the consequences of my actions. My authority ends at my boundary line. If I want to make decisions regarding
your property, I must enter into a contract with you to do so...B. Shaffer Money and property are the fruit of one's labor, and the ownership rights attendant therein is the (root)
of freedom and prosperity...G. Giles
As
a man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights...James Madison
Three Basic Property Rights 1. the right to ( acquire ) property 2. the right to ( use ) property 3. the right to ( dispose ) of property in any Peaceful, Voluntary,
and Honest manner
Under ( common
law ) people cannot ( acquire, use, or dispose ) of their property in ways that damage or encroach upon their neigbors
property. Rights of active use end when they encroach on the property ( rights ) of others. Thus, common law properly ( limits
) a persons - property rights. Ever seen
two children quarreling over a toy? Katherine Klemp tells how she created ( peace ) in her family by assigning property
rights to toys. As a young mother she often brought toys home. She saw how the fuzziness of ownership easily led to
arguments. If everything belonged to everyone, then each child felt he had a ( right ) to use anything. To solve the problem
she introduced two simple rules; (1) never bring anything into the house without assigning clear ownership to one child (2)
the owner is not required to share. Now - property rights - not parents, settle the arguments.
Property rights actually promoted sharing since the kids were ( secure ) in their ownership and knew they would always get
their toys back ... Janet Beales Freedom from ForceThe three or four basic rights-in-one
(or more: subdivide as needed) are rights to freedom to act. They identify a range of freedom one would have even
if no other people were around. Indeed, if you lived life as a 21st-century Robinson Crusoe, you would have total freedom
to think and act, and you could hold and keep any goods you could find or make. However, we are social animals. We can benefit
so much from being in society that only the worst kind of community could drive us to try to live alone. But the point remains:
the individual rights of life, happiness, liberty, and property preserve for you in the social context the freedom and responsibility
that is yours in nature. And they deny you only the phony “rights” you would never have on your own: to kill and
injure others, to take from others, or to imprison or enslave others. In society, individual rights
identify areas of freedom that everyone can enjoy equally. Thus, in society, individual rights identify areas
of freedom that everyone can enjoy equally. The obligations they impose on others are negative: to not interfere, to not coerce
anyone. This is the basic principle that unifies all the individual liberty rights; it is the basic principle of a society
of traders. Ayn Rand stated this unifying principle behind rights in the clearest terms in “This is John Galt Speaking” in Atlas Shrugged: Whatever may be open to disagreement, there is one act of evil that may not, the act that no man may commit
against others and no man may sanction or forgive. So long as men desire to live together, no man my initiate—do
you hear me? No man may start—the use of physical force against others. It is physical force to assault
or murder someone. It is physical force to restrain a person and deprive him of his liberty. Likewise, it is physical force
that you must use to cut a person off from the things that will make him happy. It takes physical force to deprive someone
unjustly of his property. Notice that respecting individual rights is not pacifism. To respect rights is never to
initiate force against others; to defend rights often requires that we use force against those who, by attacking
or robbing us, show their contempt for our freedom. There are harms people can do to each other that don’t
involve force. But the difference is this: force hits at one’s very ability to live, while other harms are more psychological
or contextual. It hurts, for example, to have your heart broken by a lover who betrays you. Yet, if you retain your liberty
you can pick up the pieces, recover, and seek new hope for love. Many economic harms don’t involve the initiation
of force. It’s horrible to lose your job, for instance, but if all that happens is that you are fired, or your employer
collapses, you retain your liberty. In that case, you can put your skills to work supporting yourself. And as long as others
retain their liberty, you can offer them your talents and productive ability, looking for a new win-win position.
And of course liberty, especially the freedom to own and use property, gives everyone strong reasons to seek out waste and
lost opportunities, and to find new and ever better ways of producing the goods we need. This expands opportunity and wealth
for everyone. It’s no accident that the societies with the most economic freedom—like Singapore, New Zealand,
Switzerland, and the U.S.—are also the richest, with the lowest unemployment rates. Rights vs.
Pseudo-rightsSadly, since the rise of socialism and the “progressive” Left early in the twentieth century,
the language of rights has become contaminated with a nearly endless wish-list of worthy-sounding goals. There is nowhere
better to start than the “Four Freedoms” championed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt and honored in the United Nations’
“Universal Declaration of Human Rights.” The language of rights has become contaminated
with a nearly endless wish-list of worthy-sounding goals. The “Four Freedoms” are: 1) freedom
of speech and expression, 2) freedom of religion, 3) freedom from want, and 4) freedom from fear. The first pair are extensions
of the basic liberty rights: if you have liberty of person and property, then surely you have the freedom to hold whatever
beliefs you care to and to communicate whatever you are willing and able to. But the second pair cannot be rights at all.
To be alive is to have needs and to always be able to benefit from something more. Only the dead are truly free from want. Of
course, Roosevelt meant by “freedom from want” that somehow people have a right to some basic sustenance, shelter,
and some other preferred list of “basic goods.” But what about the people who must provide these things? They
must suffer unjust taxation, conscription, or regulatory exaction—to force them to produce and distribute the “basic
goods.” And apparently, once they have received the “basic goods,” people are no longer
supposed to feel fear. Only a very poor student of human psychology could make such an assumption. People’s emotions
follow largely from what they believe and value. So fear can no more be eliminated from life than can value and belief. In
Roosevelt’s Promised Land, will students fear no test results? Will marketers fear no shortfall in sales? Will presidential
candidates never again fear the results from Florida? Will all dogs be muzzled so that no child feels fear at a bark? A so-called
“right” isn’t worth the name if it consists in stealing the freedom of others. But it kills clear thinking
completely to claim as a “right” that which could never exist. It is simple to tell a pseudo-right from
a real one. Ask: what initiation of force is involved in violating this right? And: who must act to enjoy this right? If force
must be initiated by, or on the part of, the rights-holder, it is a pseudo-right. If others, not the rights-holder, must do
the work for the rights-holder to enjoy his “freedom,” it is no freedom at all. Rights and GovernanceTo
read the press or study politics today, one might think that government was a special social organization with the unique
power to express the will of the people. But in fact, government is the organization which controls the guns. It is government
which sets the effective rules controlling the use of force within its jurisdiction. These rules are the law. It is the law
which determines what freedoms one has in practice, and what actions are subject to reprisal by government forces like the
police and the military. Government is the organization which controls the guns. Rights
are foundational to any liberal system of government. Cementing rights principles into the basic law of the land is the only
way to ensure that the law never encroaches on our natural and proper freedoms. The degree to which the law respects and defends
rights is our best measure of the amount of freedom a government allows. No human institution should exist except to promote
human life and happiness. This applies with especial urgency to governments, because their coercive powers have traditionally
been abused to rob, kill, and enslave. The worst crimes against humanity have been perpetrated by governments or groups fighting
to become governments: consider the Nazi Holocaust, or the killing fields of Cambodia, or the Taliban misrule in Afghanistan.
By contrast, the countries most propitious to life, whose populations have the longest average life expectancies, tend to
be those that come closest to fully respecting the objective individual rights. It is as urgent today as it ever
was that our governments recognize and respect our rights. The freedom we need to live and be happy, the freedom that modern
civilization arose from and depends on, is under pressure from all sides. Conservative factions on the right demand the government
curtail freedom of conscience, and insist that the state promote faith in God. Interest groups clamor for economic regulations
and subsidies to support their jobs or pet projects—and to hell with the rest of the country that will have to pay for
it. Leftists demand more and great, free goodies—subsidized health care, subsidized food, subsidized green technologies,
subsidized housing. Never mind who is to pay for it. Populists demand restraints on trade. Environmentalists want bans on
using land. Self-proclaimed defenders of “democracy” work to make it harder and harder for outsiders to organize
politically, and easier for office holders to avoid serious election-year challenges. Against this tide of pragmatism
and special pleading stands our real need for freedom. The individual rights of life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of
happiness are, when properly understood, the standard by which judge our government, and the ideal toward which reform should
aim. www.atlassociety.org
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by Ayn Rand
If one wishes to advocate a free society—that is, capitalism—one must realize that its indispensable foundation
is the principle of individual rights. If one wishes to uphold individual rights, one must realize that capitalism is the
only system that can uphold and protect them. And if one wishes to gauge the relationship of freedom to the goals of today’s
intellectuals, one may gauge it by the fact that the concept of individual rights is evaded, distorted, perverted and seldom
discussed, most conspicuously seldom by the so-called “conservatives.”
“Rights” are a moral concept—the concept that provides a logical transition from the principles guiding
an individual’s actions to the principles guiding his relationship with others—the concept that preserves and
protects individual morality in a social context—the link between the moral code of a man and the legal code of a society,
between ethics and politics. Individual rights are the means of subordinating society to moral law.
Every political system is based on some code of ethics. The dominant ethics of mankind’s history were variants of
the altruist-collectivist doctrine which subordinated the individual to some higher authority, either mystical or social.
Consequently, most political systems were variants of the same statist tyranny, differing only in degree, not in basic principle,
limited only by the accidents of tradition, of chaos, of bloody strife and periodic collapse. Under all such systems, morality
was a code applicable to the individual, but not to society. Society was placed outside the moral law, as its embodiment
or source or exclusive interpreter—and the inculcation of self-sacrificial devotion to social duty was regarded as the
main purpose of ethics in man’s earthly existence.
Since there is no such entity as “society,” since society is only a number of individual men, this meant, in
practice, that the rulers of society were exempt from moral law; subject only to traditional rituals, they held total power
and exacted blind obedience—on the implicit principle of: “The good is that which is good for society (or for
the tribe, the race, the nation), and the ruler’s edicts are its voice on earth.”
This was true of all statist systems, under all variants of the altruist-collectivist ethics, mystical or social. “The
Divine Right of Kings” summarizes the political theory of the first—”Vox populi, vox dei”
of the second. As witness: the theocracy of Egypt, with the Pharaoh as an embodied god—the unlimited majority rule or
democracy of Athens—the welfare state run by the Emperors of Rome—the Inquisition of the late Middle
Ages—the absolute monarchy of France—the welfare state of Bismarck’s Prussia—the gas chambers of Nazi
Germany—the slaughterhouse of the Soviet Union.
All these political systems were expressions of the altruist-collectivist ethics-and their common characteristic is the
fact that society stood above the moral law, as an omnipotent, sovereign whim worshiper. Thus, politically, all these systems
were variants of an amoral society.
The most profoundly revolutionary achievement of the United States of America was the subordination of society to moral
law.
The principle of man’s individual rights represented the extension of morality into the social system—as a
limitation on the power of the state, as man’s protection against the brute force of the collective, as the subordination
of might to right. The United States was the first moral society in history.
All previous systems had regarded man as a sacrificial means to the ends of others, and society as an end in itself. The
United States regarded man as an end in himself, and society as a means to the peaceful, orderly, voluntary coexistence
of individuals. All previous systems had held that man’s life belongs to society, that society can dispose of him in
any way it pleases, and that any freedom he enjoys is his only by favor, by the permission of society, which may
be revoked at any time. The United States held that man’s life is his by right (which means: by moral principle
and by his nature), that a right is the property of an individual, that society as such has no rights, and that the only moral
purpose of a government is the protection of individual rights.
A “right” is a moral principle defining and sanctioning a man’s freedom of action in a social context.
There is only one fundamental right (all the others are its consequences or corollaries): a man’s right to
his own life. Life is a process of self- sustaining and self-generated action; the right to life means the right to engage
in self-sustaining and self-generated action-which means: the freedom to take all the actions required by the nature of a
rational being for the support, the furtherance, the fulfillment and the enjoyment of his own life. (Such is the meaning of
the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.)
The concept of a “right” pertains only to action—specifically, to freedom of action. It means freedom
from physical compulsion, coercion or interference by other men.
Thus, for every individual, a right is the moral sanction of a positive—of his freedom to act on his own
judgment, for his own goals, by his own voluntary, uncoerced choice. As to his neighbors, his rights impose
no obligations on them except of a negative kind: to abstain from violating his rights.
The right to life is the source of all rights—and the right to property is their only implementation. Without property
rights, no other rights are possible. Since man has to sustain his life by his own effort, the man who has no right to the
product of his effort has no means to sustain his life. The man who produces while others dispose of his product, is a slave.
Bear in mind that the right to property is a right to action, like all the others: it is not the right to an object,
but to the action and the consequences of producing or earning that object. It is not a guarantee that a man will
earn any property, but only a guarantee that he will own it if he earns it. It is the right to gain, to keep, to use and to
dispose of material values.
The concept of individual rights is so new in human history that most men have not grasped it fully to this day. In accordance
with the two theories of ethics, the mystical or the social, some men assert that rights are a gift of God—others, that
rights are a gift of society. But, in fact, the source of rights is man’s nature.
The Declaration of Independence stated that men “are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights.”
Whether one believes that man is the product of a Creator or of nature, the issue of man’s origin does not alter the
fact that he is an entity of a specific kind—a rational being—that he cannot function successfully under coercion,
and that rights are a necessary condition of his particular mode of survival.
“The source of man’s rights is not divine law or congressional law, but the law of identity. A is A—and
Man is Man. Rights are conditions of existence required by man’s nature for his proper survival. If man is
to live on earth, it is right for him to use his mind, it is right to act on his own free judgment, it is
right to work for his values and to keep the product of his work. If life on earth is his purpose, he has a right
to live as a rational being: nature forbids him the irrational.” (Atlas Shrugged)
To violate man’s rights means to compel him to act against his own judgment, or to expropriate his values. Basically,
there is only one way to do it: by the use of physical force. There are two potential violators of man’s rights: the
criminals and the government. The great achievement of the United States was to draw a distinction between these two—by
forbidding to the second the legalized version of the activities of the first.
The Declaration of Independence laid down the principle that “to secure these rights, governments are instituted
among men.” This provided the only valid justification of a government and defined its only proper purpose: to protect
man’s rights by protecting him from physical violence.
Thus the government’s function was changed from the role of ruler to the role of servant. The government was set
to protect man from criminals—and the Constitution was written to protect man from the government. The Bill of Rights
was not directed against private citizens, but against the government—as an explicit declaration that individual rights
supersede any public or social power.
The result was the pattern of a civilized society which—for the brief span of some hundred and fifty years—America
came close to achieving. A civilized society is one in which physical force is banned from human relationships—in which
the government, acting as a policeman, may use force only in retaliation and only against those who initiate
its use.
This was the essential meaning and intent of America’s political philosophy, implicit in the principle of individual
rights. But it was not formulated explicitly, nor fully accepted nor consistently practiced.
America’s inner contradiction was the altruist-collectivist ethics. Altruism is incompatible with freedom, with capitalism
and with individual rights. One cannot combine the pursuit of happiness with the moral status of a sacrificial animal.
It was the concept of individual rights that had given birth to a free society. It was with the destruction of individual
rights that the destruction of freedom had to begin.
A collectivist tyranny dare not enslave a country by an outright confiscation of its values, material or moral. It has
to be done by a process of internal corruption. Just as in the material realm the plundering of a country’s wealth is
accomplished by inflating the currency—so today one may witness the process of inflation being applied to the realm
of rights. The process entails such a growth of newly promulgated “rights” that people do not notice the fact
that the meaning of the concept is being reversed. Just as bad money drives out good money, so these “printing-press
rights” negate authentic rights.
Consider the curious fact that never has there been such a proliferation, all over the world, of two contradictory phenomena:
of alleged new “rights” and of slave-labor camps.
The “gimmick” was the switch of the concept of rights from the political to the economic realm.
The Democratic Party platform of 1960 summarizes the switch boldly and explicitly. It declares that a Democratic Administration
“will reaffirm the economic bill of rights which Franklin Roosevelt wrote into our national conscience sixteen years
ago.”
Bear clearly in mind the meaning of the concept of “rights” when you read the list which the platform
offers:
“1. The right to a useful and remunerative job in the industries or shops or farms or mines of the nation.
“2. The right to earn enough to provide adequate food and clothing and recreation.
“3. The right of every farmer to raise and sell his products at a return which will give him and his family a decent
living.
“4. The right of every businessman, large and small, to trade in an atmosphere of freedom from unfair competition
and domination by monopolies at home and abroad.
“5. The right of every family to a decent home.
“6. The right to adequate medical care and the opportunity to achieve and enjoy good health.
“7. The right to adequate protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, accidents and unemployment.
“8. The right to a good education.”
A single question added to each of the above eight clauses would make the issue clear: At whose expense?
Jobs, food, clothing, recreation(!), homes, medical care, education, etc., do not grow in nature. These are man-made values—goods
and services produced by men. Who is to provide them?
If some men are entitled by right to the products of the work of others, it means that those others are deprived
of rights and condemned to slave labor.
Any alleged “right” of one man, which necessitates the violation of the rights of another, is not and cannot
be a right.
No man can have a right to impose an unchosen obligation, an unrewarded duty or an involuntary servitude on another man.
There can be no such thing as “the right to enslave.”
A right does not include the material implementation of that right by other men; it includes only the freedom to earn that
implementation by one’s own effort.
Observe, in this context, the intellectual precision of the Founding Fathers: they spoke of the right to the pursuit
of happiness—not of the right to happiness. It means that a man has the right to take the actions he deems
necessary to achieve his happiness; it does not mean that others must make him happy.
The right to life means that a man has the right to support his life by his own work (on any economic level, as high as
his ability will carry him); it does not mean that others must provide him with the necessities of life.
The right to property means that a man has the right to take the economic actions necessary to earn property, to use it
and to dispose of it; it does not mean that others must provide him with property.
The right of free speech means that a man has the right to express his ideas without danger of suppression, interference
or punitive action by the government. It does not mean that others must provide him with a lecture hall, a radio
station or a printing press through which to express his ideas.
Any undertaking that involves more than one man, requires the voluntary consent of every participant. Every one
of them has the right to make his own decision, but none has the right to force his decision on the others.
There is no such thing as “a right to a job”—there is only the right of free trade, that is: a man’s
right to take a job if another man chooses to hire him. There is no “right to a home,” only the right of free
trade: the right to build a home or to buy it. There are no “rights to a ‘fair’ wage or a ‘fair’
price” if no one chooses to pay it, to hire a man or to buy his product. There are no “rights of consumers”
to milk, shoes, movies or champagne if no producers choose to manufacture such items (there is only the right to manufacture
them oneself). There are no “rights” of special groups, there are no “rights of farmers, of workers, of
businessmen, of employees, of employers, of the old, of the young, of the unborn.” There are only the Rights of
Man—rights possessed by every individual man and by all men as individuals.
Property rights and the right of free trade are man’s only “economic rights” (they are, in fact, political
rights)—and there can be no such thing as “an economic bill of rights.” But observe that the advocates
of the latter have all but destroyed the former.
Remember that rights are moral principles which define and protect a man’s freedom of action, but impose no obligations
on other men. Private citizens are not a threat to one another’s rights or freedom. A private citizen who resorts to
physical force and violates the rights of others is a criminal—and men have legal protection against him.
Criminals are a small minority in any age or country. And the harm they have done to mankind is infinitesimal when compared
to the horrors—the bloodshed, the wars, the persecutions, the confiscations, the famines, the enslavements, the wholesale
destructions—perpetrated by mankind’s governments. Potentially, a government is the most dangerous threat to man’s
rights: it holds a legal monopoly on the use of physical force against legally disarmed victims. When unlimited and unrestricted
by individual rights, a government is men’s deadliest enemy. It is not as protection against private actions,
but against governmental actions that the Bill of Rights was written.
Now observe the process by which that protection is being destroyed.
The process consists of ascribing to private citizens the specific violations constitutionally forbidden to the government
(which private citizens have no power to commit) and thus freeing the government from all restrictions. The switch is becoming
progressively more obvious in the field of free speech. For years, the collectivists have been propagating the notion that
a private individual’s refusal to finance an opponent is a violation of the opponent’s right of free speech and
an act of “censorship.”
It is “censorship,” they claim, if a newspaper refuses to employ or publish writers whose ideas are diametrically
opposed to its policy.
It is “censorship,” they claim, if businessmen refuse to advertise in a magazine that denounces, insults and
smears them.
It is “censorship,” they claim, if a TV sponsor objects to some outrage perpetrated on a program he is financing—such
as the incident of Alger Hiss being invited to denounce former Vice-President Nixon.
And then there is [Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission] Newton N. Minow who declares: “There is censorship
by ratings, by advertisers, by networks, by affiliates which reject programming offered to their areas.” It is the same
Mr. Minow who threatens to revoke the license of any station that does not comply with his views on programming-and who claims
that that is not censorship.
Consider the implications of such a trend.
“Censorship” is a term pertaining only to governmental action. No private action is censorship. No private
individual or agency can silence a man or suppress a publication; only the government can do so. The freedom of speech of
private individuals includes the right not to agree, not to listen and not to finance one’s own antagonists.
But according to such doctrines as the “economic bill of rights,” an individual has no right to dispose of
his own material means by the guidance of his own convictions-and must hand over his money indiscriminately to any speakers
or propagandists, who have a “right” to his property.
This means that the ability to provide the material tools for the expression of ideas deprives a man of the right to hold
any ideas. It means that a publisher has to publish books he considers worthless, false or evil—that a TV sponsor has
to finance commentators who choose to affront his convictions-that the owner of a newspaper must turn his editorial pages
over to any young hooligan who clamors for the enslavement of the press. It means that one group of men acquires the “right”
to unlimited license—while another group is reduced to helpless irresponsibility.
But since it is obviously impossible to provide every claimant with a job, a microphone or a newspaper column, who
will determine the “distribution” of “economic rights” and select the recipients, when the owners’
right to choose has been abolished? Well, Mr. Minow has indicated that quite clearly.
And if you make the mistake of thinking that this applies only to big property owners, you had better realize that the
theory of “economic rights” includes the “right” of every would-be playwright, every beatnik poet,
every noise-composer and every nonobjective artist (who have political pull) to the financial support you did not give them
when you did not attend their shows. What else is the meaning of the project to spend your tax money on subsidized art?
And while people are clamoring about “economic rights,” the concept of political rights is vanishing. It is
forgotten that the right of free speech means the freedom to advocate one’s views and to bear the possible consequences,
including disagreement with others, opposition, unpopularity and lack of support. The political function of “the right
of free speech” is to protect dissenters and unpopular minorities from forcible suppression—not to guarantee
them the support, advantages and rewards of a popularity they have not gained.
The Bill of Rights reads: “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the
press . . .” It does not demand that private citizens provide a microphone for the man who advocates their
destruction, or a passkey for the burglar who seeks to rob them, or a knife for the murderer who wants to cut their throats.
Such is the state of one of today’s most crucial issues: political rights versus “economic
rights.” It’s either-or. One destroys the other. But there are, in fact, no “economic rights,” no
“collective rights,” no “public-interest rights.” The term “individual rights” is a redundancy:
there is no other kind of rights and no one else to possess them.
Those who advocate laissez-faire capitalism are the only advocates of man’s rights. www.principlesofafreesociety.com
The American concept of it is officially stated in the Declaration of Independence. It upholds man's unalienable, individual
rights. The term "rights," note, is a moral (not just a political) term; it tells us that a certain course of behavior
is right, sanctioned, proper, a prerogative to be respected by others, not interfered with -- and that anyone who violates
a man's rights is: wrong, morally wrong, unsanctioned, evil.
Now our only rights, the American viewpoint continues, are the rights to life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness.
That's all. According to the Founding Fathers, we are not born with a right to a trip to Disneyland, or a meal at Mcdonald's,
or a kidney dialysis (nor with the 18th-century equivalent of these things). We have certain specific rights -- and only these.
Why only these? Observe that all legitimate rights have one thing in common: they are rights to action, not to rewards
from other people. The American rights impose no obligations on other people, merely the negative obligation to leave you
alone. The system guarantees you the chance to work for what you want -- not to be given it without effort by somebody else.
The right to life, e.g., does not mean that your neighbors have to feed and clothe you; it means you have the right to
earn your food and clothes yourself, if necessary by a hard struggle, and that no one can forcibly stop your struggle for
these things or steal them from you if and when you have achieved them. In other words: you have the right to act, and to
keep the results of your actions, the products you make, to keep them or to trade them with others, if you wish. But you have
no right to the actions or products of others, except on terms to which they voluntarily agree.
To take one more example: the right to the pursuit of happiness is precisely that: the right to the pursuit -- to
a certain type of action on your part and its result -- not to any guarantee that other people will make you happy or even
try to do so. Otherwise, there would be no liberty in the country: if your mere desire for something, anything, imposes a
duty on other people to satisfy you, then they have no choice in their lives, no say in what they do, they have no liberty,
they cannot pursue their happiness. Your "right" to happiness at their expense means that they become rightless serfs,
i.e., your slaves. Your right to anything at others' expense means that they become rightless.
That is why the U.S. system defines rights as it does, strictly as the rights to action. This was the approach that made
the U.S. the first truly free country in all world history -- and, soon afterwards, as a result, the greatest country in history,
the richest and the most powerful. It became the most powerful because its view of rights made it the most moral. It was the
country of individualism and personal independence.
Today, however, we are seeing the rise of principled immorality in this country. We are seeing a total abandonment
by the intellectuals and the politicians of the moral principles on which the U.S. was founded. We are seeing the complete
destruction of the concept of rights. The original American idea has been virtually wiped out, ignored as if it had never
existed. The rule now is for politicians to ignore and violate men's actual rights, while arguing about a whole list of rights
never dreamed of in this country's founding documents -- rights which require no earning, no effort, no action at all on the
part of the recipient.
You are entitled to something, the politicians say, simply because it exists and you want or need it -- period. You are
entitled to be given it by the government. Where does the government get it from? What does the government have to do to private
citizens -- to their individual rights -- to their real rights -- in order to carry out the promise of showering free
services on the people?
The answers are obvious. The newfangled rights wipe out real rights -- and turn the people who actually create the goods
and services involved into servants of the state. The Russians tried this exact system for many decades. Unfortunately, we
have not learned from their experience. Yet the meaning of socialism (this is the right name for Clinton's medical plan) is
clearly evident in any field at all -- you don't need to think of health care as a special case; it is just as apparent if
the government were to proclaim a universal right to food, or to a vacation, or to a haircut. I mean: a right in the new sense:
not that you are free to earn these things by your own effort and trade, but that you have a moral claim to be given these
things free of charge, with no action on your part, simply as handouts from a benevolent government.
www.capitalismmagazine.com
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“Man’s Rights,” from Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal by Ayn Rand. Copyright (c) 1946,
1962, 1964, 1965, 1966 by Ayn Rand. used by permission of Dutton Signet, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
Read more about Ayn Rand’s Philosophy.
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We hear so much about "rights" -- a right to this and a right to that. People say they have a right to decent housing,
a right to adequate health care, food and a decent job, and more recently, senior citizens have a right to prescription drugs.
In a free society, do people have these rights? Let's look at it.
At least in the standard historical usage of the term, a right is something that exists simultaneously among people. A
right confers no obligation on another. For example, the right to free speech is something we all possess. My right to free
speech imposes no obligation upon another except that of non-interference. Similarly, I have a right to travel freely. That
right imposes no obligation upon another except that of non-interference.
Contrast those rights to the supposed right to decent housing or medical care. Those supposed rights do confer obligations
upon others. There is no Santa Claus or Tooth Fairy. If you don't have money to pay for decent housing or medical services,
and the government gives you a right to those services, where do you think the money comes from?
If you said "From some other American," go to the head of the class. Your right to decent housing and medical care requires
that some other American have less of something else, namely diminished rights to his earnings.
Let's apply this bogus concept of rights to free speech and the right to travel freely. If we were to apply it to my right
to free speech, my free speech rights would confer financial obligations on others to supply me with an auditorium, microphone
and audience. My right to travel freely would require that others provide me with airplane tickets and hotel accommodations.
Most Americans, I would imagine, would tell me, "Williams, yes you have rights to free speech and travel rights, but I'm not
obligated to pay for them!"
As human beings, we all have certain unalienable rights. Of the rights we possess, we have a right to delegate to government.
For example, we all have a right to defend ourselves against predators. Since we possess that right, we can delegate it to
government. In other words, we can say to government, "We have the right to defend ourselves, but for a more orderly society,
we give you the authority to defend us."
By contrast, I don't possess the right to take your earnings for any reason. Since I have no such right, I cannot delegate
it to government. If I did take your earnings for housing and medical services, it would rightfully be described as an act
of theft. When government does it, it's still theft -- the only difference is that it's legalized theft sanctioned by a majority
vote.
Decent housing, good medical care and decent jobs are not rights at all, at least not in a free society -- they're wishes.
As such, I'd agree with most Americans because I also wish that everyone had decent housing, a high paying job and good medical
care.
Walter Williams www.CapitalismMagazine.com
What Rights Are
What does it mean to have rights? A right is an absolute political claim. If you have right to some land, other people
ought to permit you to have it. If you have a right to vote, nobody should prevent you from voting. If animals have rights,
then we mean that no one ought to harm them. Rights are political claims because they pertain to what the law can or can’t
force you to do, and what it can or can’t force others to do for you.
Rights are not a physical property of human beings. They aren’t encoded in your DNA, rooted in your hair follicles,
or readable via an iris-scanner. But they aren’t just a moral fashion statement, either: it’s wrong to say someone
has a right simply to cheer for whatever the right stands for. I think it would be grand if people would travel to Mars. However,
that alone doesn’t give someone a right to travel to Mars. Moreover, if you have a right, you have a right
to do wrong, too. Your right to vote isn’t just a right to vote for good candidates: it’s a right to vote for
the bad ones, too, if that’s your choice.
How can you tell a pseudo-right from a real one?
In fact, rights are principles. Properly understood, they are objective moral principles that provide the foundation
for a political-legal order. No law should violate rights. Rights are “self-evident” and “unalienable”
because they are derived from facts about human nature. They are principles defining the fundamental freedoms and responsibilities
that people need to have in society, if we are to live and flourish.
Rights pertain to individuals, not groups. They derive from the basic nature of each individual human. So, they do not
pertain directly at the “group” level of, say, country, tribe, religion, or race, because all those groupings
are made up of individuals. Individuals can change the groups they belong to, but the groups can’t make do without individuals.
Most fundamentally, it is individuals who think, act, and choose, not groups. Moral responsibility lies within individuals
first, and with groups only by aggregation. It is individuals who live and die, suffer or achieve happiness. Find a happy
club, town, office, or school, and you’ll find happy individuals there.
Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness
Ayn Rand was not the first, nor the last, person to understand the meaning of individual rights. Individual rights are
a basic thread in classical liberalism and libertarianism. But Rand was rights’ clearest, most passionate and most systematic
explicator. Following and expanding on the arguments of John Locke, Rand, like the Founders, understood that individual rights
were unitary: they identify aspects of the freedom one needs to act, if one is to live in harmony with others.
The right to liberty is the right to be free to act as one chooses.
Thus “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” is not a well-meaning but vacuous bromide. It is, in fact,
a pretty precise specification. The right to life is the right not to be killed. It is the right not to be injured or harmed
in one’s body. The right to liberty is the right to be free to act as one chooses. This is crucial to one’s life
because it is through one’s productive work that one gains the goods one needs to maintain one’s life. The right
to the pursuit of happiness is the right to aim for independent goals. This is what seeking happiness consists in, and to
succeed in being happy is to succeed in living.
Property
In 1774, the Continental Congress summarized the three basic rights as “life, liberty, and property” in their
Declaration of Colonial Rights. And well they should have, because without the right to property, no right is worth all that
much. If you have the “right” to your life, but not the right to your own food, you won’t live long. If
you have the “right” to liberty, but are not free to create and own things, then your choices won’t do you
much good. And good luck pursuing happiness if “happiness” is misunderstood to be totally disconnected from any
physical things you might take joy in making; or want for their own sake; or need as means to a valued goal.
If you have the “right” to your life, but not the right to your own food, you won’t live
long.
Indeed, what is freedom of speech, if you have no right to own a press, or own a home or hall where you can speak to
others, or to own the means of transmitting your ideas? Such is the travesty of rights-talk today that while all bow before
the words “freedom of speech,” the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (also known as the McCain-Feingold bill)
has made it illegal for most citizens to spend their own money to circulate a political message, beyond certain very narrowly
set limits.
The right to property is the basis of industrial civilization. It allows us to live in a society based on trade, where
the exchanges we have are by mutual consent. Property is the basis of a positive sum, “win-win” society, because
if you have a right to your property you gain from every purchase you make or contract you sign—or at least, it is your
choice whether to take part or not in such ventures, and you remain uniquely responsible for yourself.
Freedom from Force
The three or four basic rights-in-one (or more: subdivide as needed) are rights to freedom to act. They identify
a range of freedom one would have even if no other people were around. Indeed, if you living life as a 21st-century Robinson
Crusoe, you would have total freedom to think and act, and you could hold and keep any goods you could find or make. However,
we are social animals. We can benefit so much from being in society that only the worst kind of community could drive us to
try to live alone. But the point remains: the individual rights of life, happiness, liberty, and property preserve for you
in the social context the freedom and responsibility that is yours in nature. And they deny you only the phony “rights”
you would never have on your own: to kill and injure others, to take from others, or to imprison or enslave others.
In society, individual rights identify areas of freedom that everyone can enjoy equally.
Thus, in society, individual rights identify areas of freedom that everyone can enjoy equally. The obligations they impose
on others are negative: to not interfere, to not coerce anyone. This is the basic principle that unifies all the individual
liberty rights; it is the basic principle of a society of traders.
Ayn Rand stated this unifying principle behind rights in the clearest terms in “This is John Galt Speaking”
in Atlas Shrugged:
Whatever may be open to disagreement, there is one act of evil that may not, the act that no man may commit against others
and no man may sanction or forgive. So long as men desire to live together, no man my initiate—do you hear
me? No man may start—the use of physical force against others.
It is physical force to assault or murder someone. It is physical force to restrain a person and deprive him of his liberty.
Likewise, it is physical force that you must use to cut a person off from the things that will make him happy. It takes physical
force to deprive someone unjustly of his property.
Notice that respecting individual rights is not pacifism. To respect rights is never to initiate force against others;
to defend rights often requires that we use force against those who, by attacking or robbing us, show their contempt
for our freedom.
There are harms people can do to each other that don’t involve force. But the difference is this: force hits at
one’s very ability to live, while other harms are more psychological or contextual. It hurts, for example, to have your
heart broken by a lover who betrays you. Yet, if you retain your liberty you can pick up the pieces, recover, and seek new
hope for love.
Many economic harms don’t involve the initiation of force. It’s horrible to lose your job, for instance,
but if all that happens is that you are fired, or your employer collapses, you retain your liberty. In that case, you can
put your skills to work supporting yourself. And as long as others retain their liberty, you can offer them your
talents and productive ability, looking for a new win-win position. And of course liberty, especially the freedom to own and
use property, gives everyone strong reasons to seek out waste and lost opportunities, and to find new and ever better ways
of producing the goods we need. This expands opportunity and wealth for everyone. It’s no accident that the societies
with the most economic freedom—like Singapore, New Zealand, Switzerland, and the U.S.—are also the richest, with
the lowest unemployment rates.
Rights vs. Pseudo-rights
Sadly, since the rise of socialism and the “progressive” Left early in the twentieth century, the language
of rights has become contaminated with a nearly endless wish-list of worthy-sounding goals. There is nowhere better to start
than the “Four Freedoms” championed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt and honored in the United Nations’ “Universal
Declaration of Human Rights.”
The language of rights has become contaminated with a nearly endless wish-list of worthy-sounding goals.
The “Four Freedoms” are: 1) freedom of speech and expression, 2) freedom of religion, 3) freedom from
want, and 4) freedom from fear. The first pair are extensions of the basic liberty rights: if you have liberty of person and
property, then surely you have the freedom to hold whatever beliefs you care to and to communicate whatever you are willing
and able to. But the second pair cannot be rights at all. To be alive is to have needs and to always be able to benefit from
something more. Only the dead are truly free from want.
Of course, Roosevelt meant by “freedom from want” that somehow people have a right to some basic sustenance,
shelter, and some other preferred list of “basic goods.” But what about the people who must provide these things?
They must suffer unjust taxation, conscription, or regulatory exaction—to force them to produce and distribute the “basic
goods.”
And apparently, once they have received the “basic goods,” people are no longer supposed to feel fear. Only
a very poor student of human psychology could make such an assumption. People’s emotions follow largely from what they
believe and value. So fear can no more be eliminated from life than can value and belief. In Roosevelt’s Promised Land,
will students fear no test results? Will marketers fear no shortfall in sales? Will presidential candidates never again fear
the results from Florida? Will all dogs be muzzled so that no child feels fear at a bark? A so-called “right”
isn’t worth the name if it stealing the freedom of others. But it kills clear thinking completely to claim as a “right”
that which could never exist.
It is simple to tell a pseudo-right from a real one. Ask: what initiation of force is involved in violating this right?
And: who must act to enjoy this right? If force must be initiated by, or on the part of, the rights-holder, it is a pseudo-right.
If others, not the rights-holder, must do the work for the rights-holder to enjoy his “freedom,” it is no freedom
at all.
Rights and Governance
To read the press or study politics today, one might think that government was a special social organization with the
unique power to express the will of the people. But in fact, government is the organization which controls the guns. It is
government which sets the effective rules controlling the use of force within its jurisdiction. These rules are the law. It
is the law which determines what freedoms one has in practice, and what actions are subject to reprisal by government forces
like the police and the military.
Government is the organization which controls the guns.
Rights are foundational to any liberal system of government. Cementing rights principles into the basic law of the land
is the only way to ensure that the law never encroaches on our natural and proper freedoms. The degree to which the law respects
and defends rights is our best measure of the amount of freedom a government allows. No human institution should exist except
to promote human life and happiness. This applies with especial urgency to governments, because their coercive powers have
traditionally been abused to rob, kill, and enslave. The worst crimes against humanity have been perpetrated by governments
or groups fighting to become governments: consider the Nazi Holocaust, or the killing fields of Cambodia, or the Taliban misrule
in Afghanistan. By contrast, the countries most propitious to life, whose populations have the longest average life expectancies,
tend to be those that come closest to fully respecting the objective individual rights.
It is as urgent today as it ever was that our governments recognize and respect our rights. The freedom we need to live
and be happy, the freedom that modern civilization arose from and depends on, is under pressure from all sides. Conservative
factions on the right demand the government curtail freedom of conscience, and insist that the state promote faith in God.
Interest groups clamor for economic regulations and subsidies to support their jobs or pet projects—and to hell with
the rest of the country that will have to pay for it. Leftists demand more and great, free goodies—subsidized health
care, subsidized food, subsidized green technologies, subsidized housing. Never mind who is to pay for it. Populists demand
restraints on trade. Environmentalists want bans on using land. Self-proclaimed defenders of “democracy” work
to make it harder and harder for outsiders to organize politically, and easier for office holders to avoid serious election-year
challenges.
Against this tide of pragmatism and special pleading stands our real need for freedom. The individual rights of life,
liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness are, when properly understood, the standard by which judge our government,
and the ideal toward which reform should aim. www.atlassociety.org
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