chewybrian wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2021, 4:03 am
GE Morton wrote: ↑August 21st, 2021, 7:07 pm
chewybrian wrote: ↑August 21st, 2021, 5:04 am
So, others can just die of thirst so that you can have your 'right' to the only source of water?
No one will die of thirst because of my discovery and possession of the lake. If they are dying it will be because they had no other source of water, even before I discovered the lake. Had I not discovered it they would continue to die. But now, due to my discovery, they have a means to avoid dying, i.e., by paying me for water.
Rights come from morality, and this ain't it. This is just the Ayn Rand garbage I mentioned before.
Well, you haven't refuted any of the statements you quoted above. Are any of them false? Are you now retreating to
ad hominems?
Rights don't "come from" morality." They are the foundation for morality (a rational one).
There is nothing immoral about saying that you cannot dam up a navigable waterway, or that nobody gets to own the ocean, as it seems we are doing right now.
Oh, I agree. But I never claimed otherwise. You're ignoring the truth conditions for rights claims, and indulging in hyperbole to distort what I said.
No, one cannot lay private claim to the ocean, to a navigable waterway, or to any other natural common. A "natural common" is a natural feature or resource that has been used in common by all comers since time immemorial. Hence no contemporary person can claim to be the first possessor of such a resource. Indeed, no person can plausibly claim to "possess" such a resource, as most of it will be completely out of his reach and beyond his control. Managing such natural commons is one of the few legitimate tasks of governments.
One may lay claim, however, to a spring, small pod or lake, or other natural feature which has not been claimed or used by anyone, as far as anyone knows.
How is it not a moral basis to say that all people have a right to drinking water?!
Because rights do not arise from needs. They originate with first possession. The mere fact that someone needs something does not give him a right to it.
That is not asking for a Cadillac; it is acknowledging that we all have a right to life, which seems as moral as any claim I could make.
Yes, everyone has a right to life. But that right doesn't impose any obligations on any other person. It only imposes a constraint --- that you may not (morally) kill people. It doesn't oblige you to provide anyone with the necessities of life, or entitle them to plunder or enslave you to secure them. That holds for all rights. You have a right to free speech, but that doesn't oblige anyone to provide you with a microphone or lecture hall; you have a right to property, but that doesn't oblige anyone to give you some property; you have a right to keep and bear arms, but no one has any obligation to give you a gun. Rights only mean that if you have something you have righteously acquired, other may not take it from you.
Does this clear things up?