chewybrian wrote: ↑August 20th, 2021, 5:29 am
This is much too simplistic, and does not carry the weight of certainty you want to attach to it. You have to first declare whether you are talking
about legal rights or moral rights.
I answered that in first response to TS. I'm speaking of natural and common rights, as understood throughout the liberal tradition and in common law.
Legal rights are given and supported by the legislature and the courts and the power of the military or police to enforce them. They didn't come down from the mountain on a stone tablet. They are enacted and enforced by people, and subject to change as the opinions of those people change.
Quite correct. One may have a legal right to whatever some demagogue or despot with the power to enforce it decrees. Such fiat rights ("frights") are without moral significance --- unless they merely codify a natural or common right.
Moral rights are purely subjective and decided by the individual. I may disagree with any or all of the moral rights which you think should apply, and you have no objective basis to declare that you are right and I am wrong.
I just gave you the objective basis for determining whether a claimed right exists. If you disagree that P has a right to X when those conditions are satisfied, then you simply misunderstand or are mis-using the term "rights."
There are many exceptions to your rules about rights. There are taxes and fees that could cause you to lose your right to keep your house if you don't pay them. There are building codes and divorce court rulings or even things like adverse possession that could cost you your home. On the legal side, you don't get to keep what you have unless you pay your share for the common good and play by the rest of the rules. The rules vary over time.
Those are not exceptions to my "rules about rights." Rights are not inviolable; they can sometimes be morally violated. E.g., if you injure somehow you become liable for the damages you've caused, and the victim of the injury, or someone acting on his behalf, may seize some of your property (to which you have a right) for restitution.
On the moral side, all societies are mutual pacts of cooperation to some extent. We use public funds for the public good in every society. You don't get to hold 100% of the value of your property. Rather, you give back a percentage of it to pay for roads and fire and police protection and such. Where do we draw the line? Wherever the blazes we decide to draw it.
Well, this exchange is wandering far from the homelessness issue, but . . .
Where we draw the line --- if we wish to draw it in a principled way --- is obvious. Yes, you are obligated to pay for those public services from which you benefit, i.e., roads, police protection, etc. You have no obligation to pay for anyone else's health care, however --- unless, of course, you have inflicted whatever illness or injury he suffers. And, no, we can't draw it "wherever in blazes we decide to draw it" --- unless we're amoral thugs unconcerned with rational or moral justification of our acts, who act on whim: "If it feels good, do it!"
And, no, societies are not "mutual pacts of cooperation." They are no such thing. That is the "organic fallacy." Modern, civilized societies are not tribes, "teams," giant co-ops, or "big happy families." They are not collectives of any kind. They are randomly-assembled groups of unrelated, independent, autonomous individuals who happen, by accident of birth, to occupy a common territory. They have no natural bonds, no shared personal histories, no common interests, no overriding concern with one another's welfare, and no
a priori obligations to one another. Nor have they entered into any sort of pact or contract. Before you can consider these issues productively you have to discard that ubiquitous social myth.
There is nothing immoral about taking some of your wealth to pay for guaranteed health care for everyone. Most societies do so. In fact, I would say this is the moral choice. There is also nothing immoral about deciding that a minimum standard of housing or education should be available to everyone regardless of their ability to pay for it. Many societies also do this.
Then apparently you see nothing immoral about slavery (which is, after all, forcing others to work for your benefit).