Ecurb wrote: ↑August 20th, 2021, 12:52 pm
GE Morton wrote: ↑August 20th, 2021, 11:53 am
The first possessor the crosswalk is the government of the city in which it is located, and the citizens of that city. As the owner of the street and the crosswalk, the city may impose any conditions it wishes on their use, as may the owner of any other property. The pedestrian's right-of-way in a crosswalk was transferred to him by the owner, just as a tenant's right to occupy a rental apartment was conveyed to him by the landlord (in consideration for rent paid).
Yes, the right-of-way in your example is a real right. That is is codified in law is irrelevant; if a similar right was granted to pedestrians by the owner of a private roadway it would not not be a law, but still a real right.
This seems at odds with another statement you wrote:
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.
If modern societies are not "collectives", how can they "possess" something collectively?
Modern societies are not collectives, but there are many collectives --- thousands --- within them, e.g., baseball teams, jazz bands, garden clubs, owners, managers, employees of a business, the Sierra Club and ACLU, etc. I take a "collective" to be any group of people working cooperatively at a common task or in pursuit of a common interest or goal. That is clearly not the case with modern societies. But even if a group of people are not a collective per that definition, they may collectively own something, a park, building, street, etc., if they've all (presumably) paid taxes to develop and maintain that thing.
In addition, "owners" cannot (and by right should not) impose any conditions they wish on the use of property. For example, if you own a house, you cannot impose the condition that if anyone walks in your yard without permission he is subject to being shot. If you shoot him, you will be guilty of murder.
Correct. The owner may impose any conditions he wishes, but not one that violates others' rights or imposes risks on third parties. That constraint applies to the exercise of all rights.
IN addition, your claim (to someone else) that forcing people to work for someone else is a form of slavery is incorrect. The street which was built by the city (on which the crosswalk is located) was built with taxes that were forcibly collected (which amounts to forcing someone to work for someone else). Are you saying that imposing right-of-way rules on the crosswalk is akin to slavery?
If the person forced to pay taxes does not use the streets, or receive any indirect benefit from them (such as being able to receive mail, deliveries, visitors) then forcing him to pay for them is indeed slavery. If he does benefit from them, then he has an obligation to help pay for them.
When we say we believe in a "right to health care" we are saying we feel obliged to help pay for other people's health care. Perhaps you don't want to be obligated to help your ill fellow citizens, but such an obligation is no more like slavery than the obligation to avoid driving someone else's car. Both are simply culturally constituted obligations, which, seen from the flip side of the coin, are called "rights".
Heh. That is analogous to an argument made by G.A Cohen, among others. But the difference between taking another's property and refusing to give someone your property is quite obvious and morally decisive: the former inflicts a loss or injury on another moral agent; the latter does not. And, of course, I've never before heard anyone claim that prohibiting stealing constitutes slavery. Who is enslaved --- the would-be thief? Forcing someone to work for another's benefit clearly does.