(Stillness in the Storm Editor) The following is a discussion about a concept that I think is one of the most crucial in the search for freedom. What is a right?
You Need to Understand Rights
Most people learn about rights in school, or from friends and family. But do we really understand them? Looking to the current state of things, I would say the answer is a resounding no.
We’re told that everyone has rights, and some people have a right to do things others do not. Like corporations have the right to declare bankruptcy, but students burdened with debt cannot.
So while it seems like a fairly straightforward concept, there is much to contemplate and understand. And I would argue that only you can do the work of understanding what your rights are and use them wisely. Failure to do this ensures your disempowerment in life and leads to dependency on others due to lack of self-mastery.
The Foundation of Rights
Let me add to this discussion by offering a simple, and fundamental, axiom of law: A right is an action an individual can take that does not cause harm to another but may cause harm to themselves. Stated another way, anything that causes unwelcome harm to others is not a right.
We have the right to hurt ourselves, but we don’t have the right to hurt others. Now this axiom might seem strange or even antithetical to what you believe. For the time being, and for sake of this discussion, entertain this idea as valid.
The basis for this axiom is derived from the inherent sovereignty of being—that you are the ruler of your own mind and body, to a certain degree. This assertion has never been properly refuted, to my knowledge, and is functionally recognized (secretly in most cases) by almost every institution on Earth. For example, hypnosis is a technique for influencing a person’s mind—a state of total receptivity to external suggestion. Even this example of mind influence does not discount the primacy of free will—it uses the person’s innate will and mind to receive and integrate the suggestions. Thus, the most extreme forms of coercion and manipulation still have to acknowledge and work with the innate psyche of a subject. All of this, and much more, is used to support the argument that an individual has complete authority over their own personage—even if that rulership is woefully inadequate. And therefore, a logical conclusion to draw from this assertion is that someone has the right to hurt themselves, but not others—although, hurting oneself is probably an indication they are not well.
Moving on.
This simple definition is what underpins almost all of the definitions of rights that one can find. But in order to understand this purely principled concept and apply it in the world, complexity emerges.
Due to the self-reflective nature of reality, and that all living things have the capacity to exercise rights to some degree, the jurisprudence of existence is highly complex. The principles of justice are simple, but perfect justice is a very hard thing to realize because it requires participation of all in the process—and then that process must be allowed to proceed unhindered. Incorporating everyone’s personal needs, desires, whims, and status ensures a seemingly endless stream of social challenges to work through and solve. But in the process of finding resolutions, the individual gains knowledge and wisdom—essential things for exercising one’s rights with harmlessness—while society gains harmony and order.
Rights and Society: Two Sides of the Same Coin
Since exercising a right means doing things in the world, then to use one’s rights is a social enterprise. When you act on a right it moves form a personal potential to a collective reality.
If we have a right to life, then living that life means what we do affects other people, and as a result, the only way to ensure everyone’s rights are upheld is for people to work together towards this end. Let me say that again for emphasis, the rights of the individual are projected by the collective, acting as guardians of personal sovereignty. Thus, when one becomes truly sovereign, they also steward of their fellows’ rights, working to maintain the inherent sovereignty of all beings.
Justice is the thing in society that allows people to work out their differences—to understand and discern what is the best way to solve a controversy—a situation where people feel their rights have been violated. In some cases, like murder, it is fairly easy to determine when one person violates the rights of another. But in many other ways, it is not so easy to see who has acted in dishonor of another person’s rights.
What this means is that exercising our rights has to be done with honor and respect of other people and things.
For example, the right to life is an inherent quality of living organisms, but using that right can be either harmonious or destructive—we can either work to produce the things we need to live or steal them from someone else. Or even worse, we could enact a social policy that says “I have the right to take your money so I can live.” It is this latter version of a right—the bastardization of the concept in socialist societies—that needs to be questioned. And this is chiefly what the author of the below article does.
This is likely why the author asserts that “rights don’t exist,” (at least the way we think they do) based on the premise that most of the rights we hear about in society are actually privileges, gained via social contract. And in a sense, this is true, as privileges are not the same thing as rights—a right is inherent (independent of a social contract), but a privilege is a product of social contract, a form of permission issued by one to another. However, the idea that rights exist before or in an a priori capacity is valid.
Inherent Rights
A priori rights—rights that exist from the beginning (inalienable)—are harder to pin down because it requires highly abstract thinking. The more abstract the concepts become, the more they begin to make contact with concepts of divinity, and this is why any lawful system worth its salt defines inalienable rights as coming from the divine. And even within the existing fallacious system, all law traces back to the Vatican and Roman Curia.
To assert that some rights are inherent, without also speaking to their origin, leaves the door open for moral relativism or the idea that what is right or wrong is subject to change, depending on social queues or personal whims. It also opens the door for unequal rights—that some people have more rights than others (like royalty). But these claims are fallacious because part of what makes a lawful system real and valid is that it applies to all people equality, also known as the Golden Rule of Law.
While the origin of inherent rights is a huge concept to unpack here, what can be briefly said is that these rights are “extended” from the Creator because, ultimately, all things are a part of the Creator. Thus, any rights the Creator has, the creature has by extension—because ultimately the creature and Creator are one. However, the creature has to learn through experience how to use these rights properly (or discover what they even are), and this is why life is fraught with the potential for social problems—in the act of solving them (justice) knowledge of how to act without harm is gained.
I want to offer some clarity insofar as trying to understand why rights aren’t privileges, and why defining them that way creates a lot more problems than good.
Rights are NOT Privileges
If we define a right as a privilege—as the vast majority of institutions do—then yes, it is accurate to say rights, as so defined, do not exist. This is because a right—an inherent capacity to do something—cannot also be a privilege—permission given by someone to do something. Although, as we just discussed, in order to use your rights honorably, you need to work with others.
You have the right to breathe; you don’t have to ask anyone’s permission to breathe. You simply breathe, and if someone tells you that you need their permission, then it is clear they are not understanding reality. To have a right that also requires permission would be a logical fallacy or an inherent contradiction.
But rights and privileges are related to one another because when a person exercises their rights they affect others and those people can choose to agree or disagree, to accept or reject that behavior. But this is more accurately described as consent instead of a privilege.
Introducing a new term to make understanding these things easier, consider then that in order to use your rights honorably, you should notify others whenever possible. Notice, in this sense, is the tool true sovereigns use to develop honorable dealings with their fellows, the thing that allows one to use their rights in a way that respects others.
Conversely, when someone uses their rights without notice, they create controversy, misunderstanding, or potentially, harm. For example, the right to free speech is one that most cultures acknowledge as valid, and yet almost everyone recognizes that using this right needs to be done with respect. The right of free speech is balanced by the recognition of mutual respect, specifically, the recognition that other people have the right to listen to you or not.
Stated more clearly, we all have the right to free speech, but a conversation is a “privilege” because the consent of another must be gained—we can’t have a conversation with someone who refuses to do so.
Also, if we lie or intentionally deceive others then using our right of free speech causes harm to others and the world through the proliferation of falsehoods. Thus, there are two sides to the use of one’s rights, and it is up to the individual to learn how to use them wisely. Rights, if used properly, make things better for the person using them and all others.
Therefore, exercising rights—due to the nature of our contractual reality and the fact our actions affect others—is inexorably and forever linked to socialization. Matter of fact, if we consider that all things in the universe are made of consciousness, alive in their own right, then everything we do, including living in our own bodies, is a social enterprise—without other beings, we wouldn’t be able to exercise any rights at all.
Bringing the discussion back down to Earth, learning how to use our rights honorably—so that we do not create harm and respect others—is the key of keys. This lost knowledge of how to act wisely is what humanity needs to rediscover so that needless suffering can end.
Is utopia possible? Maybe.
What we know for certain is that when we strive as individuals to learn and use our rights honorably, we will form a culture of prosperity and empowerment. The task is to endeavor to make our actions in the world harmonious, which requires self-reflection and honest communication with others.
As a final note, consider that if one were to positively identify all of the rights an individual has and lay them out in a tapestry, then this fabric, working in a holistic harmony, would ensure all people’s rights are honored. That is to say, when an individual knows what their rights are and also knows that all others have the same rights, this knowledge empowers them to act with laser-like precision, almost never committing harm, and almost always living with honor. I say almost because such individuals also recognize that their knowledge will always be imperfect and as such they know mistakes and errors are sure to happen.
Virtue is a term that defines a high moral standard in a person. For example, integrity is a virtue—the ability to act with honesty and to honor the truth. When one acts with virtue, they honor the rights of themselves and others. In this sense, virtues are the high ideals that individuals use to guide their behavior towards an ultimate goal of perfect expression of one’s rights—a fancy way of saying making the world a better place for all.
And if one were to positively identify all possible virtues, and actually strive to live them in life, then such an individual would become what we can effectively call truly harmless. They have learned how to walk that razor’s edge of exercising one’s rights while also respecting others. This is what the term virtuous means in the most accurate sense.
In conclusion, while the principle of rights is very simple, using our rights in life is not so easy. We have to be willing to think about the effect our actions cause in the world and humble ourselves when we learn that we have caused controversy.
The current fallacy of mistaking rights as privileges is, most likely, part of a coordinated campaign to destroy this essential knowledge in the human population. Given that a right helps mold a person’s behavior toward beneficial social ends—when used honorably—it is easy to see that when people forget about what rights really are and how to use them wisely, insidious agendas can take root.
Related Order Followers Are Agents of the Cabal, and You Could Be One — Repeat of Famous Shock Test Shows People Still Obey Orders
This is probably why most of the population of Earth, ignorant of themselves and their rights, continues to be used as pawns in a game of domination and control.
The below essay helps one explore these ideas in ways we usually don’t take the time for. But this is the crucial part of what learning about rights is—thinking about them at a personal level. In fact, it could be argued that without doing this essential inner work, no one can come to understand how to use their rights properly.
So please, for your sake and everyone else’s, take the time to understand what rights are.
Source – The Consciousness Resistance
by Hey Cristina, March 21st, 2017
WHAT IS A RIGHT?
What exactly is a right? Is it something that you are born with? Is it something that is a priori? Or is it a man made construct like time? You can ask one hundred individuals what they believe a right is and they will all have slightly distinct and unique perspectives on what it is. I want to use this essay as a way to bring about a discussion on what rights are and whether they actually exist.
A right is a legal, social, or ethical standard that people are entitled to. It is a social normative or idea of what is allowed by people and what is owed to people. According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Rights are entitlements (not) to perform certain actions, or (not) to be in certain states; or entitlements that others (not) perform certain actions or (not) be in certain states.”
A right is something that an individual or a group of individuals feel entitled to. They may feel entitled to this because of the laws set before them or because they feel that it is innately understood for all humans to have these rights. What I want to discuss is the different types of rights and whether they are actually rights at all. Here I am going to discuss what natural rights, legal rights, positive rights, and negative rights are and whether they are what we think they are or privileges handed down to us.
NATURAL RIGHTS
Natural rights are rights that are not manmade. They are not given by a governing body. They are what some would call inalienable. The United States declares life and liberty as natural rights (although that remains to be seen).
According to John Locke natural rights have always been. Before there were states or other governing bodies, there was nature and the people of the Earth were all subject to the laws of nature. Those laws created what is known as natural rights. What exactly could be considered a natural right? “The right to live” is considered a natural right, but is it really natural? Does mother nature stop hurricanes from running up into cities where thousands or millions of people could be hurt because the inhabitants there have the right to live? No. She doesn’t. Nature is nature and it is bound by no [man-made] laws. So if there is no natural law, there can be no natural rights.
The Earth provides all the necessities to live (if we imagine a world without war mongering governing bodies controlling the resources and flow of energy), but it does not give any individual, whether human, plant, or animal, the right to live. It simply provides the means to live and you, whatever you are (plant, animal, or human) have to work in some form or another to survive. This may mean that you have to open up your leaves every morning to catch the sun’s rays, or it may mean you have to hunt for your food, or it may mean you have to build shelter to stay warm, but whatever it is, you, the individual, has to work to live. It is not a right provided by nature, it is actually a privilege.
LEGAL RIGHTS
Legal rights are easy. They are rights granted by a governing body. They are built into a society by a legal contract. Legal rights do not have to be morally acceptable. They do not, and usually are not, granted to the people of the world. Some countries maintain certain “rights” while others take “rights” away. Individuals are subject to whatever their authoritative ruling body declares as a right. It is something given, not innately possessed.
Legal rights are not rights at all. They are approved actions that the governing body allows the people to do. I think calling a legal right a right is contradictory to the term itself. We have the “right” to marry, but only under the conditions the governing body deems acceptable. We have the “right” to go to public schooling, but only the type of schooling the governing body deems honorable.
So, are legal rights, rights? By definition legal rights can be considered a right. They are written into a social contract that the individual signs (except that we didn’t actually sign any legal contracts with out government so are we therefore entitled to those rights? Read more here.) Is a legal right a right that is innately understood? No. Is it a right that everyone is entitled to? No. Different ruling bodies have different laws in place and they grant those rules or “rights” to the individuals of that land. Are legal rights yours? No. They are given, handed down to you. They are not yours by choice. I would argue that legal rights are not rights at all. They are privileges that the governing body allows the citizens to have. Is it really your right to marry if you can only marry under the conditions set forth by the state? Is it really your right too free speech when we have journalists being blacklisted and harmed for spreading truth the the people? Is it really your right to privacy when the NSA is watching our every move? Are these rights? No. They are not.
POSITIVE RIGHTS
Positive rights are rights that people give to themselves. They are rights the people believe they and others are entitled to. According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “ the holder of a positive right is entitled to provision of some good or service.”
Some examples of positive rights:
-education
-healthcare
-housing
-internet access
-food
Positive rights can range from person to person. These are just a few common examples of what people claim they have a right to. Positive rights are typically enforced by a governing body. If we want universal healthcare, the people who believe this is a right would demand that it comes from their governing body. I do agree that IF we have a governing body working FOR us they should provide whatever the people insist on, especially since they are involuntarily taking our tax dollars to provide us with services.
However, I do not believe that positive rights are rights at all, they are privileges. They are ideas or agreements between the people and those who grant the positive rights. The right to life is not completely compatible or intertwined with the right to housing and food, although in some people’s minds these are one in the same. The current society we live in makes it very difficult to imagine different scenarios and this system creates a lot of the problems we face, but let’s say people have the right to live. Most people would say every person has the absolute right to live. They would then conclude that in order for people to have the right to live they must have the right to housing and food and in some cases, education. These are all really beautiful wants, but they are not rights. In order to provide these necessities for the 7 billion people of the planet it would have to be energy taken (either voluntarily or involuntarily) from another person or group of people. Yes, I agree that we should help each other out. If you see a hungry person on the road, buy him some food! If you believe education is important and everyone should have access to it start your own school! Or start your own initiative to educate. Make pamphlets, hold meetings, reach out! If you think everyone is entitled to something then do your best to expend that energy into your community, but do not insist that the government should grant you or anyone these rights. Remember that the government does not actually care about your rights (which is why it took 100 years of the women’s suffrage movement to gain the right to vote).
Positive rights are really beautiful and can be ideal, but they are not rights. They are privileges granted by someone to someone and in a world where freedom is becoming more and more limited we need to find a way to break away from the controlling entities that grant us these “rights” because where one person may gain, another may lose.
I want it to be clear that I do NOT support any governing body giving out rights. I do not think they are capable and trustworthy of such a task. The governing bodies have proven for centuries that they cannot handle the task of protecting the people. Ideally, the whole system would be abolished entirely.
NEGATIVE RIGHTS
A negative right is the right to non interference. It means that the individual has the right to do nothing. An individual is entitled to not help out their neighbor as much as they are entitled to help out their neighbor. Negative rights do not mean they are “bad”, it just means that no one can tell you what to do and that you are capable of deciding what you want in this life and whether you want to do anything about it.
WHO HAS RIGHTS?
Who exactly has rights? Is it me, an individual? The collective? Do children have rights? What about mentally disabled or handicapped peoples? Do animals have rights? Does the Earth have rights? Who has “rights”?
Every person on the Earth seems to believe they have “rights” and maybe they do, but how do we all agree on who has “rights” in our current society? With Big Brother watching our every move (Vault 7) one could argue that rights do not exist. We have been granted the right to privacy, but do we actually receive that right?
How do we solve the clashing of the right of the individual and the right of the collective? When is it morally acceptable to force an individual to obey or follow the demands of what you believe is your right? We believe we have the right to free speech here in the United States, but do we? What about when someone says something that is racist? Do racists lose their right to free speech?
What about when we have a group of people who need more financial assistance than another group of people? Do we invade the rights of one group to provide the rights for another? I do not agree with this form of action. I see why people would think this way, but right’s are not innate. They are given by others to others or to yourself. If everyone has rights, then we cannot rightfully overturn one individual or collectives rights to give rights to another individual or collective.
What about different people? Do children have rights? Do those deemed mentally ill (which is a whole different discussion on why the government might want to label individuals as incapable) have rights? Do handicapped peoples have rights?
Your initial response might be “of course!” Because what kind of a person would say that these people do not have rights? Not anyone with a good moral heart of course! But the truth is, no one has rights. If you believe people have rights, then when is it okay to take freedoms away from children? Why is it okay to yell and physically harm children? Do they not have the right to live in peace? To feel safe?
People labeled with mental disorders are the first individuals to lose their rights in the current political regime. Mental disorders cannot even be biologically pinpointed in many cases and are typically diagnosed based off descriptions found in textbooks. So who is to say who is mentally disabled and who is not? Why are they the first to lose their rights? They are forced into hospitals against their wills, they are told they cannot work in certain places, they are told they cannot own certain things (guns, etc.). Are these individuals less than those not stigmatized with a mental disease label? Do they really deserve less rights (if you still support the idea of rights at this point)?
What about animals? Do they not also have the right to life and liberty? Do you own an animal? Are you holding them captive? Do you eat animals? Aren’t you invading their right to life? So who’s right is it to live? Is it yours or theirs? Where is the line of rights drawn? If your rights interfere with another’s rights are they rights?
Again, this is why I say there are no rights. No one is entitled to anything at all because right’s get messy and they take away from others. This leads me to my next thought.
WHO GRANTS RIGHTS?
If we have rights, then who in this great massive world is granting them? Do you grant yourself rights? Are inalienable rights just supposed to be known (a priori)? Are right’s given as privileges by governing bodies?
If we have rights they have to come from somewhere. If you are religious you may say they come from your god. If you are a statist you may say they come from the state. Maybe you just believe they are there for the taking and no one grants them, but then this get’s really confusing because rights are either given or taken. They are not just floating in the air. If I say that I have the right to have decent housing do I go and take over someone else’s home to acquire my right to housing? Or do I force someone else to build me a suitable house? If it’s a right then I should obtain this right for free, shouldn’t I? If I have to pay for it, whether in monetary or energy wise, then it is not a right because it is something I have to work towards. If I coerce a group of people to build my house I have overstepped their rights in order to achieve my own. If I build my own house I have to invade the rights of the Earth (if you believe the Earth also has rights that is) to gather materials for my housing. In the end energy is always spent, voluntarily or involuntarily, to gain or take rights. Nothing is free and no one and nothing can grant you rights. You either have the capabilities to do something or you don’t.
Some people may argue that rights are innate. We have the right to live, so that means people do not have the right to take my life. Well, someone actually can take your life, unfortunately, so is that a right? Or a privilege?
Rights are privileges granted by someone or something with the power to enforce those rights. I personally love the idea of rights. I love the idea that I would have the right to live in a house without paying rent, or to get all the food I need to eat for the week, but the truth is I do not have these “rights”. I am lucky enough to have the means necessary to harbor these ideologies (aka: rights), but they are not provided for me and they are not provided for people anywhere. Maybe in smaller communities, where governments cease to exist, we would have the means to help those in need, but in this current system we do not even have the ability to grant others or ourselves these “rights”.
CONCLUSION
I hope that I do not give the impression that “rights” are silly. I think there are a lot of good intentions behind rights and why people believe we have them, but in the end I do not think rights exist. I do not think anyone has the right to anything, not even life itself. You were born without choice, but do you come here with inalienable rights? Or do you come here and have your rights protected and granted by governing bodies (who take rights away from others to give it to you)?
If my rights clash with your rights, then who keeps their rights? Someone must gain while someone must lose and even if it’s for a good cause it still doesn’t change the fact that it isn’t a right. All rights are man made ideas and there is no higher authority who grants everyone the same rights. Rights are privileges. They are things that some people are capable of and some are not. Should we help those less capable in achieving what we wish everyone to have? Yes, we should, but again this doesn’t change the fact that they are not rights. It is a privilege to live. It is a privilege to eat. Sadly, not everyone has these privileges. I hope that one day we can create a world where we all have the same privileges. Where everyone has the means to create or have a home, to grow or obtain food, to make or buy clothing, etc. In the end though, these are privileges.
Privileges are not given. They just are. Some people have more privilege than others based on a variety of things (race, gender, place of birth, etc). You do not choose your privileges and we have limited privileges due to the ruling body of government who maintains a monopoly on the privileges given. They maintain control over what “rights” are given and who has “rights” and who does not have “rights”. Without the central government controlling all aspects of education, energy, resources, businesses, protection services, we would have more privileges and we would be more capable of providing what we believe others should have. Unfortunately, we are subject to these rulers which is why it is essential we leave this currently dead end system in it’s place. We can create the world we wish to see here and now. We can help people without the government in place, but we have to unite as a people of the Earth. We have to believe in the power within ourselves. We have to create alternatives to the situations at hand. Agorism is a peaceful means to an end and as much as I would like to get into what agorism is I will just leave you with information for you to discover on your own.
We can discuss what privileges we believe we all should have, but this essay’s main purpose was to discuss whether rights are real or imaginary and whether or not we have them. Let me know what you think about rights and what conclusions you have come to based off your own thoughts.
Related Trust Law: How You Became A Commodity – The Creation of Constructive Trusts … “This power over us is, or is about to become, SLAVERY. We are squarely to blame”
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Stillness in the Storm Editor’s note: Did you find a spelling error or grammar mistake? Do you think this article needs a correction or update? Or do you just have some feedback? Send us an email at [email protected] with the error, headline and url. Thank you for reading.
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