Topic: New Challenge: Break The Argument

This is inspired from Andrew Wilkow.

A Freedom is one that is not supposed to be denied.


If you wish to argue that point please make a seperate thread.


If a Freedom cannot be denied, then should food, shelter, and water be rights?


If yes, then please open your house for me to live in, let me eat your food, and waste your water tongue


Actually though an attempt at humor, it is germaine. If you cannot deny it, how do you stop claims against your goods by others?


This is especially relevent since there is places with rationing of water due to limits placed upon them.




The other argument is as follows

If person A has the right to make demands of Person B, but person B cannot make counter demands on person A, where is the fairness?

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

Gone from USA "left" baiting to actual left baiting? That was brave!


> Einstein wrote:
> This is inspired from Andrew Wilkow.
> A Freedom is one that is not supposed to be denied. <

Yes.


> If you wish to argue that point please make a seperate thread. <

No problem with freedom here.


> If a Freedom cannot be denied, then should food, shelter, and water be rights? <

I have two (glib) lines of thought:
1) Pure freedom means you are free to gather food, water, and build shelter as you see fit.
2) You have the right to expect food, water, and shelter, and everyone else has the right to expect you to work for it.


> If yes, then please open your house for me to live in, let me eat your food, and waste your water <

Do you need somewhere to live? Live with me, I wouldn't mind; You work.
Just remember to not take the piss and your rights will not be rescinded.


> Actually though an attempt at humor, it is germaine. If you cannot deny it, how do you stop claims against your > goods by others? <

You've already got the stuff you have a right to, what the smeg do you want my paltry earning for you greedy, selfish piece of [poo]? Get the [sex] out of my house before I break your llegs and tell the neighbours you fiddle with children.


> This is especially relevent since there is places with rationing of water due to limits placed upon them. <

Not sure I understand... do you want to starve the unemployed? Or do you want to try and stop global rationing before it happens, due to finite rescources and our species' massive numbers, because you think you are more deserving than others?


> The other argument is as follows
>
> If person A has the right to make demands of Person B, but person B cannot make counter demands on person > A, where is the fairness? <

Why can't person B make demands too?

:\

"So, it's defeat for you, is it? Someday I must meet a similar fate..."

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

If people can genuinely not get shelter, food or water then it is a goal of the UN's WFP to provide it for them.
In the USA even if you are pennilise, there are charities that provide shelter, food and water. You would not need to knock on someone's door.

4 (edited by Justinian I 25-Apr-2010 20:28:52)

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

Rights can not be empirically tested, and therefore we have no knowledge of them.

I win!

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

fokker wrote:

"Or do you want to try and stop global rationing before it happens, due to finite rescources and our species' massive numbers, because you think you are more deserving than others?"

Perhaps if there weren't so many regulatory restrictions on where and how people are permitted to pursue survival, they would not need a right to food, water, and shelter.

However, there are government imposed, legal restrictions on where and how people are to pursue food, water, and shelter, and thus they should have the right to have food, water, and shelter.

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

@Justinian I

LOL.

Caution Wake Turbulence

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

> Acolyte wrote:

> @Justinian I

LOL.>

smile. Brilliant huh? It's such a meaningless conversation to talk about rights. It's a fiction, like the tooth fairy.

8 (edited by Chris_Balsz 26-Apr-2010 01:26:30)

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

somebody put that smug smartass in concentration camp

tongue

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

There will be a FEMA Camp for Justinian, lol

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

10 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 26-Apr-2010 03:58:13)

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

@Justinian

What if something is stated as a right because it has benefits to preserve life and improve the state?  Isn't "this is beneficial to the well-being of society" an empirically testable hypothesis, thus resulting in an empirically testable right?

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The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

@Justinian I

Some food for thought: http://mises.org/daily/3817

Caution Wake Turbulence

12 (edited by Justinian I 26-Apr-2010 05:17:32)

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

Zarf,

The probability of an effect given certain conditions is testable, but it is a stretch of Logic to suddenly call those conditions rights. For something to be a right, at least in the context of this discussion, it has to be a law guiding what we ought or ought not do, and it must exist independently of human invention. Two main proposed possibilities have been that rights are mandated by a divine being (as is stated in the US constitution), or that they are a feature of nature that can be discovered by reason.

You can negotiate an agreement for certain values and then test how to best accomplish them all you want, but is not going to prove that there are rights. It will only support the idea that rights are human inventions for causing desired outcomes.

Acolyte,

That is an interesting article. But it fails here:

"A society that placed no bounds on rape, pillage, and murder would disintegrate. Its members would defect. Without these limitations, society would be impossible. It is intrinsic to the nature of every social group that each member can rely on others not to arbitrarily rob them of their lives or their assets. Each of us reasonably declares this as a right."

I agree with the argument that the restraint of certain activities like murder and theft are essential features of a functioning human society, but the author's use of "intrinsic to the nature of every social group..." is conveniently ambiguous. The sentence could mean that these restraints are essential features of a functioning society, as I agree with, or that rights are features of nature that human societies must respect in order to function. The author's evidence suggests that the former conclusion is true, but the remainder of the paper assumes that the latter is true and relies on the reader to be duped by the ambiguity. It's a clever ploy, but it is bs all the same. It is the same as saying that the educated elite of ancient Greece had the right to rule and be obeyed, because without their expertise society could not function.

In other words, the author's evidence that functioning human societies require the restraint of human behavior does not in any way prove that there are rights. It actually supports the hypotheses the author condemns like convention or positivism, theories stating that rights are human inventions, and not that rights are features in nature.

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

> Justinian I wrote:

> The probability of an effect given certain conditions is testable, but it is a stretch of Logic to suddenly call those conditions rights.




So people just sat around and randomly said, "I've got an idea!  Let's pull a bunch of random things out of our ass and say everyone deserves them!  We'll call them rights!"

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14 (edited by Justinian I 26-Apr-2010 05:24:07)

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

> Zarf BeebleBrix wrote:

<So people just sat around and randomly said, "I've got an idea!  Let's pull a bunch of random things out of our ass and say everyone deserves them!  We'll call them rights!">

My hypothesis is that dead white political scholars used the concept of rights as a means to elevate their political principles from mere human invention to absolute and unshakable truth. Having the truth on your side is convenient, from the divine right of kings to human rights. You don't want people thinking they are human inventions, or those who dissent can argue for alternatives that are equally justified but reflect their own interests instead.

15 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 26-Apr-2010 06:37:28)

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

Which dead white political scholars?  Locke, who gave a detailed train of logic to explain what I cited above, at least for the rights he laid out?  The US Constitution, which derived its rights from Locke?

And if that's the case, where are the utterly arbitrary rights that, when created, had no functional benefit to being declared rights?  For your argument to be true that some people just decided to ride the high horse of rights, there would have to be at least a couple anomalies in terms of rights and their correlation to utility.

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

I think what IA is saying is that these 'rights' are not mandated from up high, but merely the tools required to ensure a functioning society, which is a truely human invention.

"Sticks and stones may break my bones, but i am Jesus"
"Nothing is worse than a fully prepared fool"

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

You are born free. It is the evildoers among your fellow man that wish to enslave you.

No hardworking man [/woman] who seeks to provide food, water, and shelter for him[/her]self and his[/her] family seeks to do it through a government program. They're too busy working to provide for their families. And they can do so more easily without the shackles of government making everything in their life more expensive, lowering substantially their standard of living. How much it costs you to have your government regulate every aspect of your life and every inch of land you and everyone else in your nation owns and every product they produce and every service they provide seems lost on many people. It really is a matter of experience and education. And I'm sorry if many young, idealistic fools are offended by this reality which I refuse to deny. It is noble to desire a God here on earth to ensure that all get what they need, that all get the chance they "deserve" in a just world. But the world is not just. And in the name of justice, many injustices are bestowed upon mankind. Stealing from millions to prevent comparatively few thefts is not justice. Elevating government to the position of God and giving it the rights and responsibilities of transforming Earth into the perfect, fair, just Eden one desires is a recipe for disappointment. With very real costs. I cannot stress enough how real these costs are. Because those who want you to give them the power to make everything right in this world have and will always be quick to claim that the benefits outweigh the costs. They never do. After some government as a necessary evil (and even some social safety nets, if you're as progressive as I am), it is always foolishness to expect government to provide more without wasting more than it provides.

The ONLY people arguing in favor of positive rights to food, a home, a job, etc. are those evildoers who want power and those they fool with their fallacious arguments into supporting them. They want power. Promising that they're Godly fair and trustworthy with your earnings is the claim they use to convince the impoverished and uneducated to give them that power. But they are not Godly fair nor trustworthy with your earnings, and in no civilization on Earth have they ever been.

This isn't a new story. And we know how it ends. History is available. Learn it or repeat it.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

> V.Kemp wrote:

> You are born free. It is the evildoers among your fellow man that wish to enslave you.



Ahhhh, republicans eh?

=^o.o^= When I'm cute I can be cute.  And when I'm mean, I can be very very mean.  I'm a cat.  Expect me to be fickle.

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

yes those republicans who are democrats

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

Why do you ask for a label/imply it fits a certain group better than the others? My problem is with the behavior, not with a particular group who does it x often. Bringing in your personal distaste for a particular group just misses the point.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

I can label it..


Progressives, Liberals, Socialists, Marxists, Moderate Republicans, Communists, and Moderate Democrats.

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

While you are certainly right between 0 and 100%, my point was that he was only bringing up labels rather than engaging my content because it blew his mind. tongue

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

there is no such thing as 'Rights' per se.

There is only the permitting of things.


If you feel that you have rights, and you go ahead and do something, but then 2 days later are shot for doing it. Does that mean that the person who killed you has the right to kill you? Say for instance, if you feel that Freedom cannot be denied, and I don't allow you into my house and you shoot me for it, does that mean you have the right to shoot me for denying you Freedom?

A Freedom or Right can only be denied in regards to a body of power permitting certain acts to be committed, say we have the right to bear arms, so we can have guns. The government is allowing us guns. If we didn't have the freedom or right, we could still be allowed guns until the government says otherwise. And if we have guns after they say otherwise, then they may just have you arrested and hanged. Thus, there are no rights save for what the body of power over us allows.

Insane Lemming of Drama Queens and Other Hyperbolical People

1431 ftw

Re: New Challenge: Break The Argument

seems like I win

Insane Lemming of Drama Queens and Other Hyperbolical People

1431 ftw