But no, as a matter of conscience I refuse to say everything is fine when a government demands by threat of force that I give what’s mine so that it can distribute it to others. — NOS4A2
The fact that most people want this kind of authoritarianism does not suggest that I need to accept it. — NOS4A2
But you'd just agreed that these are your preferences, comparable to the preferences of other for different things. Yet here you refer yours to your "conscience" yet the others you labelled "wants and desires". Do you have any good reason to believe that those who want different things to you aren't also acting according to their conscience?
No, we've literally just established it does suggest that exact thing. The fact that you agree other people have different ideas of what a right is, that those ideas are no less subjective than yours, and that the best way to resolve these differences is by democracy. You've just agreed that. So you do, by your own admission have to accept it.
FWIW, I never meant this to be an argument about the merits of small government, just about what exactly people mean by that, as illustrated by the argument over UBI I related earlier. — Pfhorrest
The positive right to housing is just the negative right to not die from exposure. The positive right to health care is just the negative right to not be left to die.
I do not accept their reasoning and think they are wrong. I believe there are good ideas and bad ideas. — NOS4A2
Rights are claims on individuals or the government. — BitconnectCarlos
Even if a homeless man dies on the street are we to say that everyone who passed him by violated his rights? — BitconnectCarlos
Rights are not simply wants or desires either. Otherwise I'd have a right to constant back massages. — BitconnectCarlos
So what are they then? All you've given so far is that they are claims on individuals or governments. Nothing in that prevents you from declaring a right to constant back massages.
If you've violated someone's rights you've seriously wronged them, do you agree? Are you seriously wronging someone who desires constant back massages by not giving them that? — BitconnectCarlos
I'm appealing to basic moral intuitions.... like that if I demand constant back massages from you that you're not actually obliged to give them. — BitconnectCarlos
Right. But basic moral intuitions don't help us with issues of rights because people disagree. Basic moral intuitions are not agreed upon.
then what is preventing the homeless person from claiming a right to housing?
There actually is widespread agreement on basic moral issues. — BitconnectCarlos
It's a fundamentally different type of claim than claiming a right to life, which just involves that no one kills you or maims you intentionally. If I claim a right to housing I'm claiming that someone else must pay for and build a house for me. Also someone must repair and maintain that house now. Now other people are burdened whether through their time being taken or their money being taken. — BitconnectCarlos
Yes, but these don't help us resolve differences over rights, which extend frequently into areas of morality over which there is far less agreement.
You can't just arbitrarily say its not a right because it burdens someone else. Why doe burdening someone else prevent it from being a right?
if one could gain a right simply by proclaiming it as a want or desire it would result in absurdity like if everyone were just to demand constant back massages. — BitconnectCarlos
I noted an important distinction. If you choose not to accept it as meaningful then okay. — BitconnectCarlos
If everyone were to do this there would be no civilization. — BitconnectCarlos
I never meant this to be an argument about the merits of small government, just about what exactly people mean by that — Pfhorrest
Isaac, what is your response to the parasite case that I presented earlier on our island civilization? — BitconnectCarlos
There are, however, plenty enough houses. If everyone claimed a house, everyone would have a house. I don't see any evidence at all of immanent civilization collapse resulting from such a claim.
There are more unoccupied houses than homeless people in the US.
Also, if the principle were that everyone were entitled to an equal-ish share of what is available, and too many people stopped producing as a consequence of that, then how much is available to be shared would go down, as would the size of an equal share of that, which would then incentivize people to work more again.
If everyone is given a house and a sufficient income just as a matter of right then you've destroyed the incentive to work for a lot of people. — BitconnectCarlos
But these are taking extremes. The right to clean air, clean water, good working conditions, freedom from abuse, a decent wage, freedom from discrimination, an education. None of these things have even the slightest evidence that they'll end civilisation, so why shouldn't we allow them as claims?
Ok, but who owns these homes? You can't give homeless people a home that someone has just left for a few months to go on vacation. It's still theirs. — BitconnectCarlos
We're getting way ahead of ourselves here: When you say entitled to an equal-ish share are you talking about land appropriation? If I'm imaging this correctly this seems to be saying we're just fleecing millionaires and billionaires. Am I getting you right or no? — BitconnectCarlos
but my point is that at this time there not being enough homes to go around isn’t a problem. There are more than enough homes to go around, if only their ownership were somehow distributed differently.
Stakeholder owned and/or controlled public institutions & private businesses, where the latter is well-regulated and accountable to the former, rather than shareholder owned and/or controlled public institutions & private businesses, where the latter is subsidized, bailed-out and effectively unaccountable to the former. No monopolistic, or cartel-like, Big Businesses without a subsidizing & hegemonic Big Guv'mint (re: neoliberal, national security, corporate-welfare, state capitalism). In other words, democratize the economy in order reduce the size of the corporatist 'merely formal democratic' state.What do you think makes a government “small” rather than “big”? — Pfhorrest
what concerns me is that someone needs to build those homes, manage those homes, HVAC.... and they don't have a choice in it. — BitconnectCarlos
If someone has a right to a home that home must be built. — BitconnectCarlos
We're bouncing around too much here. You bring up a lotttt of issues here which each could warrant their own debate.
I'd just like to stick to the topic. — BitconnectCarlos
Hang on, just now it was nothing more than a list of wants. Now there's reasoning? Reasoning which can be good or bad too?
OK. Apart from your own personal preference, what is your 'reasoning' why a government should protect your property?
A right to healthcare is a desire for healthcare. I don’t disagree with your want, just your reasoning for calling them a right. No need to twist around what I say. — NOS4A2
A government should protect my property simply because I pay it to do so. — NOS4A2
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