Thursday, October 9, 2008

What is a Right?

Bill Whittle notes a slippery slope and a stark diminishing of what it means for something to be a Right.

During the presidential debate Tuesday night, Barack Obama was asked if he thought health care was a "right."

He said he thought it was a right. Well, if you accept that premise, I think you can ask some logical follow-up questions: Food is more important than health care. You die pretty quickly without food. Do we have a "right" to food in America? What about shelter? Do we have a "right" to housing? And if we do have a right to housing, what standard of housing do we have a right to? And if it is a right, due to all Americans, wouldn't that mean that no one should have to accept any housing, or health care, which is inferior to anyone else's… since it's a right?


This is the problem of expanding rights to include things that aren't "rights".

It also diminishes the value of rights such as free speech and bearing arms. Which unsurprisingly Obama is also quite... questionable on.

What's the difference between the rights we have and the "rights" Obama wants to give us?

Simply this: Constitutional rights protect us from things: intimidation, illegal search and seizure, self-incrimination, and so on. The revolutionary idea of our Founding Fathers was that people had a God-given right to live as they saw fit. Our constitutional rights protect us from the power of government.

But these new so-called "rights" are about the government — who the Founders saw as the enemy — giving us things: food, health care, education... And when we have a right to be given stuff that previously we had to work for, then there is no reason — none — to go and work for them. The goody bag has no bottom, except bankruptcy and ruin.

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